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A54576 A compendious history of the Catholick church from the year 600 untill the year 1600 shewing her deformation and reformation : together with the rise, reign, rage, and begin-fall of the Roman AntiChrist : with many other profitable instructions gathered out of divers writers of the several times, and other histories / by Alexander Petrie ... Petrie, Alexander, 1594?-1662.; Church of Scotland. General Assembly. 1657 (1657) Wing P1879; ESTC R4555 1,586,559 1,238

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necessity that he could not be otherwise but that He in his Almighty and unchangeable Majesty as he knows all things ere they be did foreknow that the wicked were to be such of their own will Nor do we beleeve that any is condemned in His prejudice but according to the merit of their own iniquity nor that the wicked do perish because they could not be good but because they would not be good and through their own fault continue in the mass of perdition or original and actual sin Ca. 3. But concerning the Predestination of God it pleaseth and faithfully doth please according to the authority of the Apostle saying Hath not the Potter power over the clay to make of the same mass one vessel unto honour and another unto dis-honour We confidently confess the predestination of the elect unto life and predestination of the wicked unto death and in the election of them who are to be saved the mercy of God precedes the good merit but in the damnation of them who perish their wicked merit precedes the just judgment of God And in that predestination God hath only appointed what he was to do either in his gracious mercy or just judgment as the Scripture saith Which hath done what things were to be But in the wicked he foreknew their wickedness because it is of them and he did not predestinate it because it is not of him but because he knows all things which he did foreknow and because he is just he did predestinate the punishment that follows their merit for with him as Augustine saith is as well a fixed decree as a certain knowledge of every thing and hither belongs that saying of the Wise Man Judgments are prepared for the Scorners Prov. 19. Of this unchangeableness of the foreknowledge and predestination of God by which the future things are already done may that well be understood Eccles 3 I know whatsoever God doth it shall be for ever nothing can be put to it and nothing taken from it and God doth it that men should fear before him But that any are by the power of God predestinated unto evil as if they could not be otherwise We not only do not beleeve it but even if there be any which will beleeve such evil with all detestation as did the Arausicane Synod we say Anathema unto them Ca. 4. Item of the redemption of the blood of Christ because of so great an errour which hath begun in this point so that some as their writings declare define that it was shed even for the wicked which from the beginning unto the coming of Christ being dead in their wickedness are punished with everlasting damnation contrary to that of the Prophet O death I will be thy death and O grave I will be thy destruction it pleaseth us to hold and teach simply and faithfully according to Evangelical and Apostolical truth that this price was given for them of whom our Lord saith So must the Son of Man be lifted up that whosoever beleeves in him shall not perish but .... And the Apostle saith Christ was once offered to take away the sins of many And moreover the four Articles that were defined unadvisedly in the Synod of our brethren at Carisiac for their inutility are also errour contrary unto truth and likewise other things concluded foolishly in the 19 Syllogisms of John Scot and glorious with no secular literature although it be boasted otherwise in which rather the argument of the Divel then any argument of the faith is found we discharge them altogether from the hearing of Beleevers and by the authority of the Holy Ghost we inhibit them that those and such things be altogether shunned and we do judge that introducers of new things should be corrected lest they be smitten more severely Ca. 5. We believe that it should be held firmly that all the multitude of the faithfull is regenerated by the water and the Spirit and thereby truly incorporated into the Church and according to Apostolical doctrine are baptized into the death of Christ and washed in his blood because neither could be true regeneration in them unless there were also true redemption seeing in the Sacraments of the Church nothing is in vain and nothing in mockage but altogether all things are true and relieth upon its truth and sincerity And yet of that multitude of the faithfull and redeemed some are saved by eternal salvation because through the grace of God they continue faithfully in their redemption hearing in their hearts the voice of their Lord Matth. 10. 24 Who continueth unto the end shall be saved and others because they would not continue in the salvation of faith which before they had received and did chuse rather to make the grace of redemption in vain through their wicked doctrine and life then to keep it attain no way to the fullness of salvation and possession of eternal blessedness Seeing in both we have the doctrine of the godly Doctour Whosoever are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death and All which are baptized into Christ have put on Christ and Let us draw near with a true heart in fullness of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and being washed in the body with clean water let us hold fast the profession of our hope without change And again For them which sin willingly after the received knowledge of the truth there remains no other sacrifice for sin and He that despised the Law of Moses ..... Ca. 6. Item of grace by which the Beleevers are saved and without which never any reasonable creature hath lived blessedly and of free-will which is weakned by sin in the first man but by the grace of Jesus Christ is renewed and healed in his Beleevers We beleeve constantly and with full faith the same that the most holy Fathers have left to be kept according to the authority of the Holy Scriptures what the Arausican and African Synods have professed what the blessed High-Priests of the Apostolical See have held in the Catholick faith and presuming to decline no way into another side concerning nature and grace But we reject altogether the foolish questions and almost the fable of old women and Scot's pottage which the purity of faith cannot disgest and which have miserably and lamentably arisen in these most dangerous and grievous times unto a heap of our labours and breach of charity lest Christian minds be corrupted and fall from the simplicity and purity of faith which is in Jesus Christ So far they What they say here of Scot's pottage they understand that Treatise of Iohn Scot and have borrowed the phrase from Jerom's Prologue on Ierem. lib. 1. speaking of Celestius a Disciple of Pelagius a Briton and not a Scot. And from this word Baronius ad An. 855. § 1. writes that this Synod was convened against some vagring Scots of whom Gotteschalk was the prime man and thereby hath brought not only his Binius
honorable marriage from the Church and ye do fill her with whores incestuous and all kinde of uncleanness choose which of the two that either all these monsters of men shall be saved or the number of them that shall be saved is restrained to the few which are continent How sparing in the one and how wide in the other nothing less becometh the Author of honesty shall all be condemned but these few continent persons this is not to be a Savior Continence is rare on the earth nor did he who is fulness make himself of no reputation for so small advantage c. In Ser. de Triplici Gen. Bonor he exhorteth to have pity and to pray for them who are departed not having perfected their repentance But in Lib. Sententiar c. 9. he saith There are three places heaven earth and hell and these have their own indwellers heaven hath onely the good the earth hath of both sorts and hell the bad onely And in cap. 14. he saith Place is necessary and profitable unto repentance to wit the Church of this present life in which whosoever neglecteth to repent while he is in the body he can finde no remedy of salvation hereafter In Epist 190. contra Abailar he saith Abailard defineth faith to be an opinion then faith saith he is wavering and our hope is vain he who saith so hath not as yet received the holy Ghost Augustine saith better Faith is not in the heart by ghuessing or trowing but it is a sure knowledge the conscience also bearing witness it is the substance of things hoped for and not a fantasie of conjecture by the name substance a thing sure and certain is meant doubtings belong unto the Academicks which doubt of all things and know nothing Bernard died in the 63. year of his age Ann. 1153. 13. The same Bernard De Consider ad Euge. lib. 3. teacheth us that then A Sermon in the Councel at Rhems was a Councel held at Rhems where the Pope was also President and with Bernards works are many Sermons which are said certainly not to be his among these is one Sermo cujusdam ad clerum in Concilio Rhemensi congregat unto me it seemeth certainly to be Bernard's seeing the most part of it is Supe Cant. Ser. 33. and also on Psal Qui habitat Ser. 6. so that either another hath borrowed it from Bernard or he from another This Sermon is for the most part historical I mean serveth to give knowledge of that time and therefore I will transcribe it for the use of some who possibly have not that Book A weighty charge is laid upon me to teach the Teachers and instruct the Fathers especially seeing it is written Ask the Fathers and they will declare unto thee Deut. 32. but that Moses commandeth me whose power is great and must be obeyed not by me onely but by all and he is greater then Moses for unto Moses was but one people of Israel committed and unto this the whole Church and he is greater then an Angel for unto which of the Angels hath God said at any time Whatsoever thou shalt binde on earth shall be bound also in heaven Matth. 16. I speak in respect of office and not of merit if ye except God none is like unto him in heaven nor on earth ergo he is Antichrist This is Peter which cast himself into the sea when all the other disciples did sail unto Jesus Ioh. 21. every one of you is content with his own little ship i. e. his Arch-Bishoprick his Abbey his Provestry but he casteth himself into all the Arch-Bishopricks Abbeys Provestries this sea is wide and there the fishes cannot be told And unto you I say my Brethren the Bishops God hath exalted you highly ye are the salt of the earth as the Lord saith in the Gospel Matth. 5. ye are the light of the world ibid. I have said ye are gods and all are the children of the most High but ye shall die as men and shall ye not fall as one of the Princes Psal 81. Where is the wise man where is the Scribe where is the Conqueror of this world 1 Cor. 1. shall they not die as men and shall they not fall as one of the Princes whence shall they fall and whither from the side of the Lord into the bottom of hell Brethren two great evils are coming death and judgement for hard is the condition of death and therefore few would die but what preparation is made for death albeit it be the way of all flesh alas whither shall I go from thy Spirit and whither shall I flee from thy face Psal 138. seeing the Apostle saith We must all appear before the throne of Christ that every one may receive according to what he hath done in the body whether good or ill 2 Cor. 5. Brethren I tell you of another Synod where the Lord God will sit in judgment and there we all must stand and there will God judg all the world Here on earth unrighteousness is shut up in a bag but in that judgement God will judge righteously and there we must all appear unless the Apostle hath lyed which is a sin to say whether he be a Pope or a Cardinal or an Arch-Bishop or a Bishop or poor or rich learned or unlearned that every one may receive according to what he hath done in the body whether good or ill And seeing account must be given of those things that every one hath done in the body alas what shall become of those things that every one hath done in the body of Christ which is his Church hear The Church of God is committed unto you and ye are called Pastors but are robbers And alas we have few to feed but many to excommunicate and oh that ye were content with the wool and the milk but ye thirst after the blood Nevertheless four things I think are necessary in them which especially are set over the Church of God to wit that they enter by the door that they keep themselves in humility that they flee avarice that they indeavor to cleanness both of heart and body But what availeth it that they be chosen canonically which is to enter by the door if they live not canonically The Lord said unto the twelve Have not I chosen you twelve and one of you is a divel Ioh. 6. Lord Jesu seeing that election was in thine hand and there was none to contradict thee why didst thou choose a divel to be a Bishop good Jesus why didst thou not choose a good just and holy man as Peter was good just and holy or if thou choosest a divel why talkest thou that thou hast chosen him Brethren to day Jesus doth the like he chooseth many divels to be Bishops Alas alas where shall we finde Bishops that after they have come to Dignity keep themselves in humilty yea pride moveth them to aspire unto so great Dignity that they will break into the fold of
Indulgence so liberally confirms the People in their Superstition and Pharasaical opinion of Works But what is there for the glory of God or promoting Piety They are wont to object several pretences of their Religion which may be reduced into ten 1. The stateliness of their Churches in comparison of the emptiness and baseness of others 2. Their Unnion and Harmony when others fall into Shivers 3. Their Antiquity and others are but of Yesterday 4. They press us to acknowledge that the Church of Rome was once true And then they infer therefore they are the true Church as yet since the true Church cannot perish nor be changed in the Essentials 5. They call for the time place and persons when where and by whom the change came 6. Where did our Church lurk so long 7. The Authours of the Reformation had no Commission to attempt it 8. They vaunt of their succession without interruption 9. They glory of the substance of Religion which cannot be deemed to be still with them 10. They bewitch the people with ambitious ostentation of innumerable Friers who amongst them have renounced the World that they may attain Eternal Life All these pretences are clearly refuted by Io. Calvin Lib. de Scandalis and after him by Io. Cameron Lib. de Rom. Ecclesiae praejudiciis in a direct and dogmatical way but they are as it were sensibly demonstrated to be but idle words by Histories where we see them all confuted not only by such as did separate or were cast out of the Roman Church but even by such as lived and died in it without any separation except in judgement The Papists cannot deny but plainly confess that their Church was corrupt both in the pretended Head and Members in respect of Manners so that a Reformation was necessary but they deny the corruption in Faith or Doctrine And they say Though the Popes were wicked men yet they wanted not their power of Jurisdiction and of dispensing the sacred Mysteries Unto the first part the Apostle saith When some have put away a good Conscience they make shipwrack concerning the Faith On these words Chrysostom saith That is truly said for where the Life is rebukable such Doctrine must needs follow and so ye may see very many to have fallen into the Pit of Miseries and to have returned into Heathenish Rites for lest they be tormented with the fear of evils to come they indeavour every way to perswade themselves that all things are false which our Religion teaches and so they turn from the Faith Accordingly the Histories shew that some Popes have denied the Immortality of the Soul and have called the Gospel of Christ a Fable As for the Pope's Jurisdiction it was not so from the beginning as it is now neither Ecclesiastical nor Civil for other Bishops had power within their own Diocies without dependance upon the See of Rome as the Bishops of Millan of Ravenna and others in Italy and the Bishops of other Nations And Pope Gregory the I. as others before him did acknowledge the Emperour as his Lord and himself his Servant afterwards the Pope did salute the Emperour as his Son and by degrees they made the Emperours their Vassals Servants and Lacqueys So that if Peter and Paul were alive on Earth they would certainly deny the Popes to be their Successours because they differ besides many other Articles of the Faith so far in the point of subjection or rather exalting themselves above all that is called God yea certainly they would call the Pope the Antichrist according to what they have written in 2 Thess 2. and 2 Pet. 2. The Romanists say That in this point they have advantage against us because the Antients have written that Antichrist must be one Person of the Tribe of Dan sit in Jerusalem c. Truly it is no marvel that in the primitive times the most learned were mistaken I except the Apostles concerning the Antichrist since the prophecies could not be throughly understood before they were in some good measure accomplished But if we inquire the judgement of the learned and prudent men in the middle times concerning the Antichrist and generally of the corruption of the Church we may receive more sure information and certainly those are the best Witnesses of what was done in their daies A good number of their Testimonies in all ranks I have compiled for this end in this Book which is humbly presented unto Your HIGHNES first trusting that under Your Patronage others may the more willingly look upon it and be informed in the Truth and then with confidence it shall be graciously accepted because Saepè Tibi Deus hic saepe legentur Avi with the same travel of reading in Your tender years Your HIGHNES may learn both the condition of God's Church in former times and the lives of Your Glorious Ancestours Emperours and Kings of whom You have Your Illustrious Descent and so from them You may know how to serve God and how to deport Your Self in all the daies of Your Pilgrimage that You may be glorious in Heaven and the following Ages may have Your example outvying and outstripping if possible all the Williams Charlses Henries Jameses Adolphs and others in Christian Prudence Righteousness Prowess and Temperance So prayeth Your HIGHNESSES Most humble And obedient Servant ALEX. PETRIE THE FIRST TABLE Shewing some Texts of Scripture that are now controverted and how they were expounded in former times For understanding these Tables it is to be noted that because the Book is divided into two parts in respect of numbring the pages therefore in the Tables the letter S signifieth the second part and the number following directs unto the second part and where S is not the number directs unto the first part Likewise as if every page were divided into three parts the letter b pointeth at the beginning or first part of the page the letter m at the middle or second part or thereby and the letter e at the end or third part In this first Table the letter p stands between the numbers of the verse and of the page Psal LI 17. p. 100. LXII 12. p. 27. e CXX 3. p. 102. m Zach. XI 17. p. 473. e Matth. XII 46. p. 212. e XVI 18. p. 97. m 157. m 172. e 211. m 212. e 293. e 244. e 317. e 331. m 435. e 488. b. 576. m S. 291. e XVI 19. p. 213. b 543. e XXIII 37. p. 370. m XXIV 24. p. 28. e XXVI 39. p. 349. m Luk. I. 28. 35. p. 174. m XVI 31. p. 213. m XXII 19. p. 98. e 31. p. 475. b 32. p. 543. e 38. p. 347. m Joh. I. 16. p. 27. e 17. p. 213. m III. 13. p. 213. e 223. m S. 306. m VI. 35. p. 214. b 53. p. 102. m 55 56. p. 175. m 63. p. 214. m X. 1 2 3. p. 214. m 223. e 10 28. p. 175. m
nature with Christ who receive him and are renewed by his Spirit by whom he was conceived Away therefore with that superfluity whereby it is said and defined that there was is or shall be no man whose nature he hath not assumed 2. It is affirmed No man was is or shall be for whom Christ hath not suffered Of which question what other can we answer but that first we demand them who have defined this and admonish them to weigh vigilantly and faithfully lest perhaps by little considering what they should say they say and write such things against the faith and their own conscience for to omit those who are now or shall be till the end of the world among whom shall be the Antichrist certainly of that innumerable multitude of the wicked which have been from the beginning untill the coming of Christ and being dead in their wickedness are condemned in everlasting pains we think not that they who have written this do beleeve that Christ hath suffered for them which are dead in their wickedness and now condemned in everlasting judgment for if it be beleeved that he hath suffered for them why may it not also be beleeved that he hath suffered for the Divel and his Angels Therefore as it cannot be said that Christ Jesus hath suffered for those wicked and damned Angels so far be it that we should believe that he hath suffered for those wicked and damned men ...... But of those who as yet continue in their unbelief and wickedness shall perish if good men who have defined these things could demonstrate unto us by sure and clear testimonies from the authority of the Holy Scriptures what the Lord hath suffered for those we should also beleeve the same and if that they cannot let them not contend now for that which they read not let them be ashamed to determine what they cannot find to be decreed by any Councel of the holy Fathers or determination of Ecclesiastical doctrine or if they find any thing written by the ancient Doctours whereby occasion of such interpretation may be given yet saving the reverence due unto them let them rather contain themselves and submit unto Divine authority 3. They say All the unbeleevers are not redeemed by the mystery of Christ's blood so neither are the beleevers redeemed who have not faith which worketh by love Why should we speak of this question seeing it is manifest from what is said that no redemption in Christ is unto any unbeleevers and all beleevers who come truly unto faith and grace of regeneration receive their true redemption and true regeneration because they cannot be truly regenerate unless it be truly certain that they are redeemed from the power of the Divel and bondage of sin neither can they be truly redeemed unless they be cleansed in the laver of mercy and made free from the guilt of sin and from the power of the Prince of this world unless which is most absurd in this definition it be said that our Lord Jesus Christ hath suffered even for the wicked who perish in their sins and it be affirmed that every beleever is not truly redeemed by the mystery of His passion and renewed in his baptism Hincmar Bishop of Rhemes could not take this censure patiently but writ Epistles unto several Bishops in defence of his opinions That censure is oppugned by some and Remigius sent abroad his censures of them as Vsser in histor Gottescal cap. 8. hath at length John Scot did follow Hincmar and although in other things he had purchased a name yet because here he undertook a wrong and maintained by others cause Florus a Deacon of Lions and Prudentius Bishop of Tricassin did not spare him as is at large loc cit cap. 9. 10. 11. I will shortly shew their testimonies whereby summarily their doctrine may be known Florus saith Whereas he John saith that man sinning hath lost liberty but not the power and vigour of the liberty he saith not rightly for he hath not kept in part and lost in part the gift of liberty but as he hath lost the power and vigour of liberty so he hath lost liberty it self so that now he is not free unto good from which he hath fallen he continueth free unto evil because as of his free-will he forsook good so by free-will he cleaveth unto evil Man therefore after that damnation hath free-will whereby he may incline and doth incline unto evil through his will he hath free-will whereby it is possible that he may arise unto good but that he ariseth unto good it is not of his own vertue but of the compassionating grace of God for he who is heavily diseased may possibly receive health but that he may receive health he hath need of a medicament and he who is dead it may be said that possibly he may rise and live yet not by his own vertue but by the power of God so the free-will of man being wounded and dead may be healed but by the grace of God shewing mercy Again John saith If any cause precede will that is nature to think good or evil it is not nature where he speaks manifestly against truth for if no cause precede the will of man to think or do good whence is in man a good will that is a good affection to think or do any good for man hath not of himself a good will nor doth he any good but he hath it from him of whom the Apostle speaks unto beleevers It is God who worketh in us both to will and to do according to his good will He by his mercy preveneth the will of man as the Psalmist saith My God his mercy shall prevene me He inspires into man the grace of thinking well as the Apostle saith Not that we are able to think a good thought as of our selves but our sufficiency is from God Therefore He is the cause of good will in us He is the cause of good desires and of perfecting He is unto us the cause of mercy and grace by which we are able not only to do well and to perfect but also to think well And not only doth he these things in his elect in this life but also before the foundation of the world he hath predestinated them by his grace that they should be holy and blameless before him as the Apostle witnesseth Seeing therefore so great and such a cause which is the cause of all good things both in making and rewarding his creatures is unto us the best and eternal cause of good will prevening us by grace that we may will well and do well how saith this man that no cause precedes our will and works Or if any cause precede them that cause is not nature Seeing the Almighty God who is the cause of our good will is the highest and best nature .... But far be it to say that this highest and best cause precedes our will to think or do evil and nevertheless a
came from France with Lewis fell sick and being moved in conscience called unto him some of the English Lords and said unto them I lament your wretched case and from my heart I do pity the desolation come upon your Country the dangerous snares which are laid for your confusion are hid from your eyes but take heed in time Prince Lewis hath sworn a great oath and sixteen of his Nobles of whom I was one that if he obtain the Crown of England he will banish them all which are now against their native King and are Traitors to his noble Person And that ye take not this for a fable I assure you upon my faith being in this condition as ye now see at the mercy of God I have great conscience hereof and I pity your estate and so give you this warning your King hath for a season kept you under but if Lewis shall prevail he will put you from all of two extream evils chuse the least and keep it secret what I have told you Shortly thereafter he departed this life When this was once noised among the Barons they were in great heaviness for they saw themselves betrapped every way on the one side was the Pope's curse and also Lewis dealing to the French all that he purchased either Territories or Castles yea and they heard him say They were all Traitors Then they agree to submit themselves unto King John they were easily pardoned And John recovered Rochester Castle and City London York Lincoln and prevailed in many hazardous adventures against Lewis and Alexander The same year John did lodge two days in the Abbey not far from Lincoln and there died Some say he was poisoned by a Cistertian Monk Matth. Parisien saith he died of an Ague through sorrow and surfeit Rog. Hoveden and 1. Fox in Act. Monim give him this testimony He was indeed a valorous Prince and unfortunate like Marius having experience of both fortunes nor loved he the Mass Then many of the Lords swear obedience unto Lewis But William Earl of Pembroke Marshal of England a grave and wise Counsellor did quietly and friendly call together sundry of the Earls and Barons and set before them Henry the eldest Son of King John being them nine years old and perswaded them to embrace him for their King and he was crowned by Wallo at Glocester with consent of them which had followed his Father and Wallow acccursed them all which did follow Lewis Nevertheless Lewis did more and more harm in the Land until the above named William went against him with an Army and then he fled into London and sent unto his Father for help an hundred Ships were prepared in France but Richard a bastard Brother of King John having onely eighteen Ships for keeping the Cinque-Ports set upon them and by providence fifteen of them escaped not unsunk or taken Then the Ambassades of Lewis writ from Rome unto him If he left not England the Pope would renew the sentence of excommunication against him likewise many of the Nobles forsook him Then he sought a treaty with the King and at last it was concluded that a 1000 l. should be given unto Lewis to depart and should never return So he was honourably convoyed unto the Sea And reconciliation was made betwixt Henry and Alexander with consent of the Legate Then Wallo began his harvest the Kings had dealt for themselves and their Armies and the Legate could wring nothing from them but he calleth the Clergy to account Hugh Bishop of Lincoln paid 1000. marks unto the Pope and as much unto the Legate c. He summoned the Scotch Bishops and Abbots to Anwick some opened their purses and were absolved and the most stubborn as he called them were sent to Rome With the inferior Church-men he took another course he sent for the Prior of Duresm and Westbeck the Arch-Deacon to go into Scotland and call before them the Priests and Canons into every principal Town of the bounds and there partly upon their confessions and partly by wearisome protractions from day to day great sums were squeezed from them They who went to Rome had purchased Letters from the Bishops and Abbots of England against Wallo and accused him before Pope Honorius of avarice and other crimes Wherefore the Pope took from him a part of the prey and the accusers were absolved and sent home with empty purses But the Pope being not yet contented sent Cardinal Aegidius to exact other sums for absolving them from their vow of going into Palestina When Aegidius returned he said he was robbed by the way therefore another Legate was sent to gather as much The King convened his Nobles and Prelates and all in one voice did send and forbid the Legate to come into the Realm G. Buchan Hist lib. 7. Also England groaned under these burthens and sent their grievances unto the Councel at Lions Regrating 1. That the Pope was not content with Peter-pence but extorted from them great sums of money without consent of the King and against all precedent examples 2. Patrons cannot present unto Benefices which are given to Romans ignorant of the language to the great prejudice of souls and spoiling of the Realm 3. Of the frequent recourse of the Pope's Legates by whom faith and fidelity the ancient Customs of the Nation the Authority of the Statutes Laws and Priviledges are abrogated But the Pope's purse had no ears to hear such complaints and anon he sent for more money wherefore a Proclamation was made in name of King Henry the III. that no man should consent to any exaction of money unto the Court of Rome The Pope in a rage directed instantly his Letters unto the Bishop of Worcester charging all England under pain of his curse to obey his Legate before such a day and that Bishop to be executioner of his curse Fear of the curse prevailed against the former Proclamation But the Pope was not yet satisfied he was not ashamed to crave first the tenth then the fifth part and lastly the third part of all Church-revenues within England besides other extraordinary occasions and the yearly revenue of the Pope in England was 60000. marks sterling Whereupon the King sent his Messengers again unto Rome and the Nobles did by writing complain of the scandals arising from the avarice of the Court and spread their complaint through the Christian world professing that they would not suffer the Country to be so rudely abused although the King would wink at it and unless these things said they unto the Pope be speedily redressed by you let your Holiness know for certainty that it may not without cause be feared that such danger is like to ensue both to the Church of Rome and unto our King that no remedy will easily be found for it At that time John a Cardinal and an English man did entreat his Holiness for God's cause to bridle with some temperance the passion of his minde which is here said he
for the remission of sins This profession of our faith is confirmed by the words of Christ which are written by the Evangelists and Holy Paul Unto this profession may be added this body of Christ and his blood should according to the institution of Christ and his Church should be taken in both kindes of bread wine in remembrance of his death and of his blood shed as he said Doe this in remembrance of mee Then this death of Christ as it is declared in the Gospel and the fruits of his death should be preached as also the hope of his blood shed as the Apostle witnesseth saying So oft as ye eat of this bread and drink of this cup ye shall shew forth the Lords death untill He come Thirdly according to the sure knowledge of spiritual truth of which the Euangelist John doth write as also for assurance of giving taking using and of truth by faith in hope as the Lord saith Take and eat Take and drinke Fourthly for the conjunct use for according to the institution and practise of Christ and the primitive Church the Priest should then administer when the necessity of believers requireth and he should receive with them as He saith Doe yee this in remembrance of mee And Paul saith The cup which we blesse is it not the communication of the blood of Christ and the bread which we break is it not the partaking of the body of Christ for wee many are one bread and one body who are partakers of that one bread and one cup. Fifthly for distinction of believers from the unbelievers and unworthy and for excommunication and rebuke of those who being defiled with the spot of vices do refuse to amend Of this saith Paul I would not have you partakers with the Devils yee can not drinke of the cup of the Lord and the cup of Devils And again he saith Put away the evill from yourselves for if any who is called a brother among you be covetous or a fornicator or an idolater or a dronkard or a railer or a thief with such a one eat ye not Behold this is our faith most Gracious King concerning the body and blood of Christ which as we are afraid to change or forsake these things which our Lord JESUS hath been pleased to testifie and for which end we doe now declare it so neither dare we add any thing unto it which the Lord of the Sacrament hath not added as also the primitive Church which followed Christ in poverty and affliction in singleness of heart hath not altered the ordinances of his law Concerning this Sacrament which our Lord through his great mercy hath ordained for love of his elect have many contentions arisen in opinions expositions and addition of sanctions or decrees so that contrary unto the intention of the Lord's institution they have furiously raged against others even to take away their lives But we for eschuing so great mischief have our refuge unto the faith of Christ even unto his words and meaning so often repeated in his word so that what He commanded to believe we do believe it simply and what He hath commanded to do we would do it faith fully truly we doe not only believe that that bread is His body which being taken and blessed and broken He testifieth to be his body but also if He had taken a stone and said This is my body we would have fully believed it Because of this our simple faith and because we will not suffer ourselves to forsake it for the opinion of men wee are called hereticks likwise for the actuall use unto which the word of Christ and his Apostles and the example of the work of the same sacrament doe invite us because we doe and use it so with upright faith in remembrance of the death of Christ wee are condemned judged worthy of prison and are afflicted for wee being tied unto Christs command and dissuaded by his forbidding doe worship him with reverence and honour due unto him and we feare to worship any other thing as him only sitting at the right hand with the Father and the Holy Ghost Wherefore gracious King let your highness understand that we do so not in contumacy or any contempt but for feare of God and in obedience unto him and wee pray that your Highness would shew compassion on us who are condemned for the faith of Christ as wee wish that the most High would of his grace be pleased to preserve and keep your honour from his wrath By the same faith we believe that the ordination of priests is truly from the high Bishop and great priest that in stead of the embassage of Christ the ministery preaching of the gospell doctrine judging offering of prayers by men thanksgivings and praises may be done unto God by them And it is from God unto men that the promise of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that the promises of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that they who intend to ordain others should follow the example of Christ and should consummate his ambassage with a right mind without respect of persons free from covetousness and simony By the same faith we declare that they which are to be ordained or promoted to higher or inferior orders should excell other believers in a godly life and faith in Christ for a lively faith sanctifieth and maketh fit unto all offices and possesseth the blessing and life for good works of an honest conversation are the garments and ornaments of a priest to the glory of the heavenly Father and example of the people and shew the vertue of the word they should also have more aboundant gifts of the Holy Spirit to wit more servent love toward Christ confidence of their own and their nieghbours salvation trust in God equity of mind a wholsome feeling of faith in a good conscience theire feet prepared unto the Gospell of peace prudence of Spirit knowledge of Gods law discerning of Spirits and the like What clerck soever by such an ordination is advanced unto the priesthood wee professe that such an ordination is a Sacrament because it is a signe of the true priesthood of Christ Jesus and of his ordination by God the Father and a forme of the ministry as of the head of his Church to offer unto God the incense of truth in Christ Wee approve that three things are necessary unto the full gradation of a presbyter first the the triall of his life faith gifts and fidelity in lesser things that are intrusted unto him another prayers with fasting thirdly the giving of power with words suitable there unto and the imposition of hands for corroboration By faith wee doe testify that marriage is a lawfull honest and
acknowledge nothing in the Supper but bread and wine and ascribe nothing unto the sacraments but that they be badges of Christian profession But now I affi●e before the Lord unto his Church as my diu●lged books can testify that I was never of that mind or did think that in the holy Supper nothing ●● given or distributed but bread and wine as empty signes of the Lords body and blood and not also the body and blood of the Lord. Likewise albeit in the sacraments I did speak of that as a main thing that they are the badges of our profession yet I never denied that the Lord gives those also for recommending his mercy and exhibiting the gi●ts of life yea and the same gift not in one place only The only thing that I did impugne was that the sacraments do of themselves confirm faith seing that is the work of the Holy Ghost But when the dispute continued and Luther had declared all the matter of the sacrament more fully I saw that he neither did unite the Lords body and blood by any naturall ty unto the bread and wine nor did inclose them locally in the bread and wine nor did ascribe unto the sacraments the proper virtue whereby they of themselves can bring salvation unto the receivers but he did assert only a sacramental union between the Lords body and the bread and between his blood and the wine and that he did teach that the confirmation of faith which is asscribed unto the sacraments is by virtue not which cleaveth unto the external things by themselves but which belongs unto Christ and is dispensed by his Spirit by means of the Word and the holy Sacraments So soon as I did observe this it was my serious purpose to shew and recommend it unto others and so I desire to testify in this place unto all men who shall read this that Luther and others who are truly with him and follow his teaching rightly doth not hold any impanation in the holy supper nor any local inclosing of Christs body in the bread or of the blood in the wine neither attributeth any saving power unto the external actions of the sacraments of themselves But they hold a substantiall presence and exhibition of the Lords body and blood with the bread and wine in the holy supper and the reby they declare plainly the words of the Lord and the testimony of the Apostle which presence and exhibition is certain by the Lords word and institution without any natural union of the Lords body and blood with the elements for the Lord doth not come down again from the heavenly glory into the condition of this corruptible life They do also acknowledge and preach the saving presence and exhibition but by virtue of the Lords and no● of the external action and that the communicants enjoy it when with true faith they partake of the sacraments Certainly our Saviour did intend as in all his actions so especially in the sacraments to advanoe our salvation which if wee enioy not it must be through our own fau●● For the bread which wee break is the communication of the Lords body and the cup of thankes-giving is the communication of his blood and unboubtedly unto the end that both the communion of Christ may growe●h us and all salvation may be perfected Therefore who knowing this mystery can doubt that all who are religiously partakers of the Lords table by the same partaking have their ●aith into Christ more confirmed that is more full salvation not indeed by the benefit of the external action of itself but through the good pleasure of our heavenly Father and power of our Lord Jesus Christ which he shewes toward us in the ministry of the holy Church For the more gravely and with the more religious ceremony the redemption of Christ and the communion is set forth in the holy table pious hearts that believe the promises of the Lord are the more commoved and do the more earnestly embrace the tendered communion of Christ and afterwards are the more zealous in confidence and duty unto Christ And therefore what either I in my former En●●rations or others have written against the natural union of the bread and Christs body or that local inclosing think not godly reader that those were against Luther and them that stand rightly with him for those neyther hold nor teach any such thing neither do the words which they do use carry such an opinion by themselves as even I thought some time for which only cause I did carpe at their words and I doubted not that their mind was any way more sound Huldric Zuinglius whom all that knew him know to have been Zealous and of admirable dexterity in windicating the Church unto Christ from the tyranny and superstition of the Pope when M. Luther and others contended that the bread is the body of the Lord or that the Lords body is in the bread did persuade himself that they thought the Lords body either to be turned into the same substance with the bread or to be inclosed locally in the bread and therefore he did alwayes alledge against the first If the bread be the Lords body the bread was crucified for us and against the other those passages which ●estify that the Lord left the earth and went into the heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father out of those he began to expound Is in the words of the Lord This is my body for signifieth and by the heat of contention he was so carryed that when he would impugne only the impanation and local inclosing or presence of Christ after the manner of this world and said that the Lord is more absent then present in the holy supper and that the signes are rather given here then the body and blood of the Lord and yet it was not his judgement that the Lord is simply or wholly absent from the supper or that the symboles are given without or altogether empty of the Lord body and blood as he himselfs professed afterwards when he was here treating about the agreement of the Churches in this particular and so did he write in the Apology unto the Princes of Germany for he there did maintain the presence of the Lord by the words of Augustine So sometimes when he would beware that men sought salvation by the external work of the ●acraments he averred plainly that the sacraments are but badges of Christian society and conferre nothing unto salvation But in other places he writes plainly that the sacraments do help faith Whence it it clea●e that when he writes Sacraments do confer nothing unto salvation nor confirm faith thereby he understood that the sacraments that is the outward actions of the sacraments have of themselves no power to strenghthen the conscience with encrease of faith for when he intended to prove that his saying The sacraments give not salvation nor confirm faith he alledgeth that to confirm or encrease faith is the work
is most properly a Pastor he that hath not received imposition of hands and hath received from Christ pastorall gifts and a call from a flock obeyth the call in feeding that flock conscienciously Or he that hath received imposition of hands and hath the charge of 100 or 200 flocks and they never seek him nor see him but he waites upon other affaires not belonging to a pastorall charge I grant in the Court of Rome and in the judgement of Satan a ceremony is better then substance But the question is Which of the two is the truest Pastor in the ballance of the Sanctuary Can any consciencious man think as the Court of Rome judgeth Another motive may be thought that since that Writer was guilty of perjury for many times had he subscribed that Confession abjuring Hierarchy and yet took a Prelacy one after another he could not speak nor write a good word of that disciplin into which he had sworn so oft nor of the maintainers of it but with some spight as appeares throgh all his booke which he calleth The History of the Church of Scotland but may rather be called The calumnies and railings against the Church of Scotland whereof he was an enemy and by which he was justly and solemly excommunicated in the year 1638. What is in that book of the faith doctrine or piety of the Church Many of these calumnies in this posthum book he had written before in a Reply ad Epist Philadelphi and it was told him in the Vindiciae that he had written against his conscience It is said Pag. 50. Why should one believe a man who makes not conscience of his words And Pag. 56. Whatsoever may have the shew of a reproach this ingrateson scrapeth together to spue it out against his Mother the Church In which words envy which appeares throughout vented it self wholly for what can be said or forged in a Narration more wickedly than to be silent in that which is good and to proclame what is evill or which may make a shew of evill And Pag. 67. Should not a Bishop whe though he were a Papist yet should at least have the shaddow of gravity be ashamed to fain like a brawling wife what all men know to be false And because in that pamphlet he had written as he doeth oft in this later book that the King applied himself contrary to his mind unto the will of the Ministers it was told him Pag. 59. What can be spoken more vilely and unworthily against the Royall honor then that he applied his will unto the wicked endeavours of his subjects and loosed the raines unto the boldnesse and crimes of wicked men But this is the imprudence by the just judgement of God of flatterers that when they wold most earnestly catch they do most offend So that in a word whosoever regardeth the honorable memory of K. James VI. or the credite of the Church of Scotland will not believe that book of lies and calumnies I return unto that Assembly I. The first three Sessions were taken up with the election of a Moderator and Clerk and one ordinance that Acts of every Assembly should be formed by certain brethren and be publickly read before the dissolving of the Assembly and be in-booked II. The 4. and 5. Sessions have some particulare references III. In Sess 6. The Commissioners that were appointed to deall with the excommunicat Earles report their diligence severally and that they submitt themselves unto the Church in all the prescribed articles The Assembly ordaines the same Commissioners to see the performance of their promises in all the articles so far as possibly can be performed for the time and after performance to absolve them from ●he Sentence of excommunication and to receive them into the bosom of the Church IV. In Sess 7. Notes in form of declaration of certain of the Acts of the G. Ass holden at Perth in Febr. last for explaining his Ms and the Assemblie's meaning for the satisfaction of them which were not acquainted therewith and which are ordained to be registred in the Acts of this present assemb 1. Concerning the lawfulness of the said Ass holden at Perth it 's declared that one of the reasons moving the brethren to acknowledge the lawfulnes of that Ass is found to have been that the Commissioners of the Church had accorded with his Maj. therein as is expressely set down in his Maj. Letters 2. The reason moving the Ass to grant the more willingly to the second article concerning the reproving his Maj. lawes was that his Maj s earnest constant affection to the religion and obedience to the word was evidently known unto the said Ass and that it was his Ms declared will intention alwayes to frame his lawes wholl Government according to the same for this cause the Ass agreeth to the said article 3. Concerning the article ordaining no mans name to be expressed in pulpit excepting notorious crimes c. the point of notoriety is further defined If the crime be so manifest and known to the world ut nulla tergiversatione celari possit 4. Concerning the Article ordaining that no convention of Pastors bee without his Ma. consent c. His Ma s consent is declared to be extended to all and whatsoever form of G. Ass or speciall permitted authorized by his law and as they have warrant in the word of God As being the most authentick form of consent that any King can give 5. Concerning the article of providing Pastors to Burghs It is declared that the reason thereof was is that his Majesty was content and promised that where the Gen. assembly findeth it necessa●y to place any person or persons in any of the saids townes his Majesty and the flock shall either give their consent thereunto or a sufficient reason of the refusall To be propounded either unto the wholl Assembly or to a competent number of the commissioners thereof as his Majesty shall think expedient V. Answers to the rest of his Maj s questions as they were propounded by his Majesty and his Commissioners in the present assembly 1. Concerning the propositions craving that before the conclusion of any weighty matters ●oncerning the estate of his Hieness or of his subjects his Ma s advice approbation be craved thereunto that the same being approved by his Ma. may have the better execution and if need require be authorized by law the assembly craves most humbly that his Ma. either by himselfe or his Commissioners in matters concerning his estate or the wholl estate of his subjects and others of great weight importance that have not been treared before would give his advice and approbation thereunto before any conclusion of the same And for the better obedience to be given to the like statutes in all time coming that his Majesty would ratify the same either by Act of Parliament or Secret Counsell as shall be thought needfull The which his Majesty promiseth to