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A33335 The marrow of ecclesiastical history contained in the lives of one hundred forty eight fathers, schoolmen, first reformers and modern divines which have flourished in the Church since Christ's time to this present age : faithfully collected and orderly disposed according to the centuries wherein they lived, together with the lively effigies of most of the eminentest of them cut in copper / by Samuel Clark. Clarke, Samuel, 1599-1682. 1654 (1654) Wing C4544; ESTC R27842 679,638 932

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such indeed as were stuffed with so many errors and fooleries wherein that society of men did abound as that it is a wonder how any man that had the use of reason should assent thereunto yet many partly through fear and partly through ignorance subscribed them Wherefore Mr. Calvin answered them learnedly confuting their errors by solid arguments and so set forth their fooleries that every man which was not wilfully blind might easily discern the same Thus ended this year to which the next succeeded no whit mi●der either in regard of the famine or pestilence which infested all Savoy and Master Calvin proceeding according to his accustomed manner confirmed his owne at home and strongly opposed the adversaries abroad publishing his four books about free-will which he dedicated to Phil. Melancthon against Albert Pighius the greatest Sophister of his age and who had singled out Calvin for his antagonist being promised a Cardinals hat if he could carry away the victory from him But being frustrated of his labour he gat that which the enemies of the truth only deserve viz. That he stanke amongst learned and good men himself being deceived by the Divel How much Melancthon esteemed of those books of Master Calvin himself testifies in his Epistles which are in print Master Calvin also the same year wrote to the Church at Montbelgard whereby the mouths of calumniators may be stopped who accuse him of too much rigidness in the exercise of Ecclesiasticall Discipline The year following which was Anno Christi 1544. Master Calvin declared his opinion about the purpose of the Church of Neocome in Ecclesiasticall censures and at home Sebastian Castalio whom we mentioned before being a light man and very ambitious having translated the New Testament into French was exceedingly displeased that Master Calvin did not approve of it yea he grew so angry that he vented divers errors and not consent therewith he publikely preached that the Canticles of Solomon was an impure and obscaene song and therefore would needs have if expunged out of the sacred Canon and because the Ministers opposed him he railed exceedingly against them which they judging unfit for them to bear called him before the Senate where being heard with much patience he was at last condemned of slanders and commanded to depart out of the City From thence he went to Basil where being at last admitted what his carriage was there is besides my purpose The year before the Emperor Charles the fifth being to war against the King of France had promised the Germans that they should not be molested for their Religion till a generall councill should be called which as he told them he would take care to be effected This the Pope Paul the third was much incensed at and published an harsh expostulation against the Emperor because he had equalized the Hereticks with the Catholicks and had thrust his sickle into another ●●●ans harvest The Emperour answered That which he thought to be reason But Master Calvin because he saw in the Popes Letters that the truth of the Gospel did suffer together with the innocency of good men took him up very roundly and repressed his impudence At this time a Diet was assembled at Spires upon which occasion Calvin published the Book Of the necessity of reforming the Church then which that age produced not a book of that subject that was more weighty and nervous The same year also Master Calvin in two books did so confute the Anabaptists and Libertines who had revived the monstrous heresies of former ages that whosoever read them except he was willing to it could not be deceived by them and they which had been formerly deceived could not but be reclaimed to the truth Yet the Queen of Navar was offended with his book against the Libertines being so bewitched with two of the chief Patrons of that heresie Quintinus and Pocquetus whom Calvin had noted by name that though she was not otherwise tainted with their errors yet she had a great opinion that they were good men and therefore took her selfe to be wounded through their sides which when Master Calvin understood he wrote to her with admirable moderation as not unmindfull of her dignity nor of all the good she had done for the Church of God and yet withall as became a faithfull servant of Jesus Christ he reprehended her imprudence for admitting such men and asserted the authority of his Ministry and he so far prevailed that the men of that abominable sect of Libertines which began apace to flock into France afterwards kept themselves in Holland and the Countries adjacent The labours of this year being finish●d the succeeding year being 1545 brought new and greater labours with it For the Plague increasing in the City and neighbour Villages seemed as if it would devour all before it and coveteousness so prevailed with the poor people who were imployed to attend the rich in their sickness and to cleanse their houses that by an horrible conspiracy amongst themselves with a pestilentious ointment they anointed the posts thresholds and doors of many houses whereby a more grievous pestilence ensued and these wicked instruments of the Divel had bound themselves to Sathan by an oath that by no torments they shou●d confess their wickedness Yet many of them being taken in the City and villages were punished according to their deserts It s almost incredible what envy and reproach this act brought upon Geneva and especial●y upon Master Calvin as if the Divel should rule there altogether where he was most opposed This year was also infamous by that abominable and cruel Edict which the Parliament of Aquitane set forth against the poor Waldenses of Merindol Cabriers and those parts whereby most unheard-of cruelties were exercised not against some few but against all of them without any distinction of ages or sex yea to the very burning of their Towns Some of these that escaped flying to Geneva Master Calvin was the more afflicted for them and carefull of them because a little before he had written consolatory Letters to them and sent them faithfull Pastors for the instructing of them purely out of the Gospel and had also where they were in danger before preserved them by his intercession to the Germane Princes and Helvetians The unhappy controversie also of the Lords Supper sprange up again Osiander a man of a proud and monstrous wit reviving it out of the ashes For the quenching of which flame Master Calvin did what possibly he could as may appear by his Letters which he wrote to Melancthon about the same But the intemperancy of Osiander was such that he would by no means hearken to the wholsome counsell that was given him by those two men In the mean while the Plague still raging in the City took away many good men Whereupon Master Calvin out of the Pulpit thundred against many wickednesses especially against whoredom
the Eastern Churches and seeking the glory of God and the good of the People regarded not the reproaches of evil tongues whilest his Minister did that which himself was less apt and fit to do By this means Augustine like a bright candle set in a candlestick gave light to all that were in the house The fame of this thing flying abroad was the occasion that many Presbyters being allowed by their Bsishops Preached the good Word of God to the People in the Bishops presence At this time the Manichaean Heresie had infected many both Citizens and Strangers in the City of Hippo being deceived by a certain Pestilent Heretick by name Fortunatus a Presbyter remaining in that City Hereupon many of those Citizens and Strangers both Catholicks and Donatists come to Augustine requesting him to confer and dispute with this Manichaean Presbyter whom they judged a learned man about his opinions who willingly imbraced the motion being ready to render a reason of the Faith and Hope that was in him to every one that should ask it as also not only to exhort with wholesome word of sound Doctrine but to convince the gainsayers But he enquired whether Fortunatus was willing to do the like Hereupon they hasted to Fortunatus exhorting perswading and earnestly intreating him to imbrace the motion But truly Fortunatus was very fearful to encounter with Augustine whom he had formerly known at Carthage infected with the same Error But being overcome by their importunity and ashamed to decline the encounter he promised to give Augustine a meeting and to dispute with him The time and place being appointed multitudes flocked to it publick Notaries were appointed to write down what passed the Disputation continued two days the event was that this Master of the Manichees was neither able to overthrow the Catholick Faith nor to defend his own Erroneous opinions and so wanting an Answer he which before was accounted a great and learned man was now judged of no value nor ability to defend his Errors which did so fill him with confusion and shame that presently after he forsook Hippo and never after returned again And so through the blessing of God upon Augustines labors many who before were infected with that Error were reclaimed and imbraced the true Catholick Faith Augustine continued to Preach the Word of Truth frequently both in the Church and from house to house confuting the Heresies of the times especially the Donatists Manichees and Pelagians The same also he did by his writings the Christians wonderfully admiring and rejoycing in it so that through Gods blessing the Catholick Church in Africk began to lift up her head which formerly had been wonderfully corrupted and dejected by reason of Hereticks especially through the Rebaptizings of the Donatists whereby they had infected and seduced many Augustines Books also and Tractates being dispersed filled with Learning and the Authority of the Holy Scriptures so prevailed through the Grace of God that not only the Catholicks but many Hereticks flocked to Hippo to hear him and every one that could write or get others to do it for them wrote forth his Notes for their future benefit so that the sweet smell of the Doctrine of Chirst was by this means dispersed all over Africk which the Churches beyond-Sea hearing of much rejoyced therein for as when one member suffers all the members suffer with it so when one member is honoured all the members rejoyce with it At the same time the African Bishops holding a Synod at Hippo by their command Augustine being yet but a Presbyter disputed before them of Faith and the Creed which he performed to the joy of them all especially of the good old Bishop Valerius who gave much thanks to God for his mercy vouchsafed to him therein and fearing least some other City which wanted a Bishop should choose Augustine and so get him away from him which indeed had come to pass unless Valerius hearing of it had caused Augustine to go to another place and there hide himself so that when they sought him he could not be found wherefore this good old man fearing the like again and finding himself much weakned by Age wrote privately to the Primate of Carthage alleadging the weakness of his body and the infirmities of his old Age and therefore desired that Augustine might be made his Coadjutor in the Bishoprick of Hippo which by his importunity he also obtained So that the Primate coming to visit the Church of Hippo and bringing some other Bishops with him Valerius before them all and before all the people which were assembled together declared publickly his desire which they all approved very well of and the People earnestly desired that it might be effected but Augustine refused the Bishoprick being contrary to the custom of the Church whilest his own Bishop lived But many perswaded him that it was not such an unusual thing producing many examples both of the forreign and African Churches for it so that he was forced to yeeld his consent and was ordained to the charge of the Bishoprick And when he was thus ordained a Bishop he Preached the Word of Life more frequently fervently and with greater authority then he did before and that not only in his own City and Country but in all places where he was requested whereby the Church of God exceedingly encreased Many also of the Donatists frequented his Sermons took Notes and carryed them to their Bishops which when they had read they used to contradict but they that carryed them either answered them themselves or else carryed their answers to Augustine who with much meekness and gentleness confirmed the Truth and reselled their Errors He also wrote many private Letters to the Bishops and many principal Laymen of the Donatists admonishing and exhorting them that they would either reform their Errors or come to a publick Disputation but they distrusting their own cause would never write back to him again but being enraged with anger used to exclaim against and both publickly and privately to rail upon Augustine as a deceiver of souls and that as a Wolf he ought to be slain in defence of the Flock and without all shame neither fearing God nor men they proclaimed that whosoever would murther him should without all doubt have all their sins remitted unto them These Donatists had in their Churches a perverse and violent kinde of men who went up and down under the pretence of chastity who were called Circumcelliones and there were very great numbers of these who were dispersed through all the Regions of Africk These being instructed by evill Teachers were so inflamed with Pride and grew to such audacious boldness that many times they neither spared their own nor other men requiring them to do things against all right and reason and if any one opposed them he was sure either to be soundly beaten or basely murthered by them they being usually armed with sundry weapons raging up
Collen where he applyed himself to the study of the Arts and Tongues and afterwards betook himself to the study of Divinity and commenced Batchelor in Divinity Then returned he into his own Country and at Bern was chosen first a Canon and after that a publick Preacher For indeed he excelled all his Colleagues in Piety Learning and Eloquence About this time Hulderick Zuinglius began to Preach at Glorana and afterwards at Zurick the Gospel of Christ purely by whose Ministry it pleased God to enlighten our Haller who not consulting with flesh and blood presently adjoined himself to Zuinglius and endeavoured to propagate the Truth both publickly and privately Anno Christi 1526. the twelve Pages of the Helvetians appointed a Disputation at Baden about matters of Religion whither when Zuinglius could not go with safety Oecolampadius and Haller went thither where they had a great dispute with John Eccius the Pontificians Champion The year after the Bernates which is the most potent Canton of the Switzers desired a Copy of that Disputation and when they could not obtain it and the differences about Religion began to encrease by a publick writing set forth Decemb. the seventeenth they appointed another Disputation in their City to which they invited their neighbor Bishops intreating them also to bring their Divines along with them which if they refused they threatened to lay a fine upon their possessions which were within their Jurisdiction They also invited any other Divines out of other parts to come to the Disputation promising them safety upon the Publick Faith They also agreed upon Laws for the Disputation and published the Questions which were to be handled which were That the Church hath but one head viz. Christ and that she knows not the voice of any other That the Church can make no Laws besides the Word of God and therefore no man is bound by Traditions That Christ hath satisfied for the sins of the World and therefore they which seek out any other way of Salvation or expiating their sins deny Christ. That the body and blood of Christ are not received corporally in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper That the Mass wherein Christ is offered up to his Father for the quick and dead is blasphemy and an abomination before God That Christ alone is our Mediator and Advocate to his Father and that no other is to be sought out or invocated That after this Life there is no Purgatory That Images are not to be worshipped and therefore that all that are set up in Churches for that end ought to be taken away That Matrimony is not prohibited to any order of men January the seventh Anno Christi 1528. this Disputation was held and the issue of it was the most were satisfied in all these points so that presently after Popery was cast out of the City and all the large Territories of the Bernates by the unanimous consent of all though the Pontificians did all that possibly they could to hinder it and by their example some of their neighbors did the like and in particular the City of Geneva When thus our Haller had been a great instrument of Reformation in this Country and had set things in good order in the Church so that his fame began much to spread abroad it pleased God to take him away by an immature death Anno Christi 1536. and of his Age 44. to the great grief of all his friends The Life of Urbanus Regius who dyed Anno Christi 1541. VRbanus Regius was born in Argalonga in the Territories of Count Montfort of honest Parents who bred him up in Learning and when his childhood was over they sent him to Lindau where was a School famous both for the Masters and store of Scholars here he profited much in Grammer Learning so that from thence he was sent to Friburg where he was a diligent Auditor of sundry men excelling in all kinde of Learning Then was he entertained in the house of Zasius an Excellent Lawyer who loved him dearly for his diligence and industry Zasius also allowed him the use of his Library in which Regius did as it were hide himself diligently reading over all such Authors as were fit for his studies and therein especially observed such Notes as Zasius in his younger days had written in the Margins of them which Notes Regius in the night time used to write out so that when Zasius arose sometimes in the night because he could not sleep he still found Regius writing out those Annotations whereupon he used softly to pull him by the Ear saying Thou wilt get all my Art and Learning from me And when at any time he had found him asleep with his head leaning on the table he used to lay one or two great Law-books upon his shoulders and so leave him till he waked Zasius loved him as his son both for the sweetness of his nature and carriage as also for his diligence and industrie in his studies When thus at Friburg he had informed his judgement and stored his minde with Learning he went to Basil that by hearing the Professors of the Arts and Tongues he might enrich himself with more Polite Learning At this time of all the Universities of Germany Ingolstade was the most famous which was governed by John Eccius a most learned man in Philosophy whose fame coming to the Ears of Regius he left Basil and went to Ingolst ade In that place where there was a great confluence of Students besides the publick Lectures there were many which read privately amongst whom Regius also set to reading private Lectures having many that resorted to hear him At last divers Noblemen sent their sons to him to be educated desiring him to furnish their children with books and all other necessaries for which they would take care to pay him again quarterly but when he had run into debt for them they neglected to return their money which caused him to think of departing being tired out with the importunity of his Creditors and having an opportunity he listed himself a Souldier under a Captain that went against the Turks leaving his books and other furniture to be divided amongst the Creditors Being now amongst the Souldiers it happened that John Eccius who was Governor of the University coming forth to see the Souldiers espyed Regius amongst them and enquiring the cause of his so sudden a change he told him how those Noble men had served him whereupon Eccius got him released from his Captain and by his Authority procured the Debts to be paid by the Parents of those Youths which had been with him whereupon he returned to his studies again and growing famous for his wit and learning Maximilian the Emperour passing through Ingolstade made him his Laureat-Poet and Orator After the departure of Maximilian he grew so grateful to Ernest Duke of Bavaria and Leonard Eccius a Noble man
what profit came to the people thereby Another decree for the abolishing of Christmas-day and that no holy day should be observed but the Sabbath onely which did so offend some loose persons that they bruited abroad that Master Calvin had abolished the Sabbaths to bring the greater odium upon him This offence taken by some occasion●● Calvin to write his book of Scandals dedicated to Lauren●● Normendius his intimate friend Anno Christi 1551. great contentions brake out in the Church and this year was begun with the death of Bucer to the great grief of the whole Church and of Master Calvin especially who alwayes highly prised him About the same time dyed Joachim Vadian a Senator of Geneva a man endowed with singular learning and piety Whereupon the wickedness of the factious persons brake forth again which had slept a great while These men would by no means suffer the exiles which fled thither for Religion to injoy the priviledges of the City and not content therewith Mast. Calvin having been forth to Preach beyond the Rhodanus as he came home they entertained him with scorns and one Raimund his Colleague having occasion one evening to pass the bridge over the Rhodanus they had almost cast him into the River and lastly they raised a great tumult in the Church of Saint Gervase because a child being brought to be baptized the Minister refused to give him the name of Balthazar which name had beenf or some reason forbidden by their Law Neither could Master Calvin tel how to cure these evils but by his invincible patience About the same time another mischief invaded the Church of Geneva which was occasioned by one Jerome Bolsec a Frier Carmelite of Paris who had indeed laid aside his Coul but not his Monkish mind This man first fled to the Dutchess of Ferrara whom he deceived till being found out he was driven from thence Then pretending to be a Physician he came to Geneva but the learned Physicians there rejecting him that he might manifest himselfe a Divine he vented some false and absurd opinions about Predestination first in private and then in the publick Congregation Him therefore did Master Calvin confute first with a moderate reproof only then sending for him to him he laboured to instruct him better but he either puffed up with his Monkish pride or provoked by the seditious persons seeking by him to provoke Master Calvin took the boldness upon the sixteenth of October to preach upon this Text He that is of God heareth the words of God and they which hear them not are not of God whence he took occasion to preach up Freewill and that Predestination was out of works foreseen withall reproaching the true doctrine and shewing himself seditiously proud and he became the more bold because seeing Master Calvins seat empty he judged him to be absent But indeed Master Calvin coming late sate behind some others and when the Frier had done Master Calvin suddenly standing up though he had thought of no such thing before then truly if at any time he shewed what a man he was confuting the Frier with so many testimonies of Scripture with so many places out of Saint Augustine and lastly with so many weighty arguments that all were ashamed of what he had taught but only the impudent fellow himself Insomuch that one of the Magistrates of the City apprehended him and committed him to prison for a seditious person and after hearing and examining his cause the judgement of the Senat of the Helvetian Churches being also requested upon the 23th day of Decemb. he was publickly condemned for sedition and Pelagianisme and banished the City being rhreatned with severe punishment if he were afterwards found either in the City or territories belonging to it After this going into a neighbour Town he was the cause of many and great stirs there till he was twice expelled the Country of the Bernates From thence going into France he sought to get into the Ministry in the Reformed Churches which he found in a peaceable condition first in Paris then in Orleans pretending great penetency for his former miscarriages and of his own accord seeking reconciliation with the Church at Geneva But presently after when he saw the Churches under affliction he fell back to his Popery loading the reformed Churches with many reproaches At the same time the Colledge of Ministers at Geneva in a publick meeting asserted the true Doctrine of Predestination which Calvin put into writing So that all the Divel gat by these contentions was that that head of Christian Religion which before which was very obscure was now very clearly opened to the understanding of all that were not contentious The year following which was 1551. it further appeared what a flame this wicked Varlet had kindled though condemned by the common judgement of so many Chu●ches For the difficulty of the question having not been sufficiently explicated by the Ancients did stir up especially curious wits to make inquiry into the same By which means the factious persons supposing that they had gotten an excellent advantage against Master Calvin thought that by removing him they might subvert all things So that it cannot be imagined what stirs arose not onely in the City but also in other places as if the Divell had set all his engines on work to raise contentions For though there was a sweet agreement amongst the chief Pastors of the Churches yet there were not some wanting in the Country of the Bernates which accused Calvin as if he had made God the Author of sin Being forgetful how far he had professedly opposed that cursed Tenet when he had confuted the Libertines At Basil Castalio a good and simple man though he did all things closely yet it was discerned that he defended Pelagianisme and Melanc●●hon had so b●gun to write of these things that though he had formerly subscribed Calvins book against Pighius yet he seemed to brand the Genevians as if th●y held the Fate of the Stoicks The Pontificians also though they had been a thousand times confuted yet renewed their old slanders These things did much trouble Master Calvins mind and so much the rather because the efficacy of error was so great at this time that th● mouth of truth in some places seemed to be stopt by publick Authority Neither was this a controversie of a few years This same year that good Hermite whom we mentioned before appeared publickly to dispute with Calvin who had suffered a repulse when some years before he had sought t● creep into the ministry whereupon he turned Lawyer and the Patron of the factious persons Their cause came to be heard before the Senate with a great contention on both sides the first fighting with impud●ncy and the favour of the wicked but M Calvin defending his Doctrine only with the authority of truth And the truth prevailed M. Calvins writings being judged pious and
Bartholdus and Hallerus Anno Christi 1524. he went to Basil where he profered a publick disputation with the Popish Divines of that place but the Masters of the Universitie would not suffer it saying That his Theses savoured of the new Doctrine till the Senate being informed hereof gave him free liberty of disputing and then Farellus set up his Theses publickly in the Colledge which were these Christus nobis perfectam vivendi regulam praescripsit Christi mandata sunt observanda in quibus iis qui continentiae donum non habent matrimonium praecipitur Alienum est evangelii luce Judaicum discrimen vestitus ciborum aliarum ceremonia●um observare Periculosae sunt preces mu●torum verborum contra Christi mandatum Christi mandata non sunt in consilia convertenda n●c contra Soli Deo Sacrificia offerenda quae Spiritus dictat c. When these Positions were divulged the Bishops Vicar the Rector and Governours of the University forbade all under them upon pain of excommunication either to dispute or to harken to them The Senate on the contrary thinking that this command derogated from their authority commanded their Parish Ministers and students of the University that they should be present and if they did otherwise they forbad them the use of their mills furnaces and Merchandize Hereupon a Disputation ensued in a great Assembly of the Clergy and Citizens But shortly after the Bishops Vicar and the Rector of the University and their Popish faction drove him by force from Basil their darknesse not enduring the light Neither was the servant greater then his Master From thence he went to Mont-Bellicard and to some other places where he preached the Gospel with so much fervour and zeal that it was evident unto all that he was called of God thereunto Anno Christi 1527. he went to a certain Towne called AElin where he preached the Gospel and was admonished by Occolampadius to mingle prudence with his z●al Anno 1528. he went to Aquileta amongst the Bernates where he preached Christ and undauntedly opposed Antichrist disputing also with divers at Bern whereupon ensued a wonderfull change in Ecclesiasticall affaires Anno Christi 1528. he with V●ret went to Geneva where they planted the Church and propagated the Gospel and many of the Citizens imbraced it yet at first not so much out of love to the truth as out of hatred to Popish Tyranny Long he had not been there before the Bishops Officers drew him into the Bishops Count which two of the Studies much disliked the rather because Farell promised them that he would prove all his Doctrine out of the holy Scriptures So that they accompanied him into the Bishops Court that they might see all things to proceed in judgement lawfully but it fell out otherwise For the Judge of the Court would by no means endure a Disputation saying If that be suffered all our mystery will be destroyed and withall railing upon Farell he said Thou most wicked devill why camest thou to this City to trouble us I am not answered Farel as you call me but I preach Jesus Christ who was crucified for our sins and rose againe and he that beleeveth in his name shall bee saved This is the summe of my arrant I am a debtor unto all that are ready to hear and obey the Gospel desiring this onely that the obedience of Faith may flourish every where and I came into this City to see if there were any that would lend me he hearing and I wilrender an account of my faith and hope every where and will confirm my Doctrine with my blood if need be Then cryed out one of the Court in Latine He hath blasphemed what need we any more witnesses He is guilty of death Hurle him into Rhodanus Hurle him into the Rhodanus its better this one Lutheran should be put to death then that further troubles should be raised Farel answered Do not utter the words of Caiphas but of God Then one strake him on the mouth with his fist and hee was commanded to stand aside as if they would consult and in the interim he was shot at with a gunne by the Vicars serving-man but it hit him not God defending his servant And though one of the Syndics favoured him yet now the other shrunk from him so that the Bishops Councell prevailed that he should be driven out of the City And thus being accompanyed with some Citizens hee and his partner Anthony Salner were expelled the City but God turned it to the great good of others for they sowed the seed of the Word in the neighbouring Country by the side of the Lake Lemannus viz. at Orba and Granson Neither yet through Gods power and goodnesse was the work interrupted at Geneva For just at the same time came a young man of the Delphinate called Anthony Frumentius who entering into the City taught a publick School together with the Rudiments of Grammer he most happily layd the Foundation of Christian Religion in the hearts and mindes of his Scholars which were not a few Anno Christi 1541 Master Farel went to Metis and preached in the Church-yard of the Dominicans The Friers when they could not otherwise hinder him rang their Bells But he having a strong voice did so strain it that he went on audibly to the end of his Sermon The day after there came about three thousand persons together to hear the Word of God but some that favoured the Gospel intreated Mr. Farel so long to forbear as till he might preach without a tumult Then was he questioned by the Magistrates by what authority or by whose request he preached To which hee answered By the command of Christ and at the request of his Members Gravely discoursing both of his own authority and of the excellency of the Gospel telling the Magistrate what his duty was in reference thereunto But shortly after by the command of the Emperour the Citizens of Metis were forbidden to hear any man preach who was not licensed by the Bishop and some others Whereupon Mr. Farel went from thence to Neocome where he wholly employed himself in the service of the Church performing the office of a faithfull Pastor to extreame old age with admirable zeale and diligence When he heard of Calvin's sicknesse in the year 1564 hee could not satisfie himself though he was seventy years old but he must goe to Geneva to visit him He survived Calvin one year and odde moneths and died aged 76 years Anno Christi 1565. Anno Christi 1553 the Genevians though they owed themselves wholly to him yet were carried on with such fury that they would have condemned Farel to death and did such things against him that Calvin wished hee might might have expiated their anger with his blood This was that Farel who discouraged by no difficulties deterred with no threatnings reproaches or
Nowel was born in the County of Lancaster Anno Christi 1511 of an ancient and worshipfull Family and at thirteen years old was sent to Oxford and admitted a member of Brasennose Colledge where hee studied thirteen years and grew very famous both for Religion and Learning In Queen Maries daies he amongst many others left the Kingdom that he might enjoy his conscience and returning when Queen Elizabeth of blessed memory came to the Crown she made him Dean of Pauls where he was a frequent and faithfull Preacher By his writings he defended the truth against some English Popish Renegadoes For thirty years together he preached the first and last Sermons in Lent before the Queen wherein he dealt plainly and faithfully with her He was a great Benefactor to Brasen-nose Colledge where hee had his first education Hee was the enlarger of Pauls School made the threefold Catechism which was much used long after He was very charitable to the poor especially to poor Scholars A great comforter of afflicted consciences He lived till he was ninetie years old and yet neither the eies of his mind nor body waxed dim And dyed peaceably in the Lord Anno Christi 1601. D. TOSSANVS The Life of Daniel Tossanus who dyed A no Christi 1602. DAniel Tossanus was born at Mombelgart in Wirtemberg Anno Christi 1541. His Father was Minister in that town about six and thirty yeares who carefully brought up this his son in learning and 〈◊〉 fourteen years old sent him to the University of Basil where he continued two years and then he commenced Batchelor of Arts From thence Anno Christi 1557 he went to Tubing and was there main●ain●d to his studyes for two yeares more by the bounty of 〈◊〉 Ch●istopher who did it for his Fathers sake who for many years had deserved so well of the Church of Mombelgart Our Daniel whilst he was at T●bing applyed himself to the study of humane Arts and Philosophy in which he profited so eminently in a short space that at the end of two years he was made Master of Arts and then was sent for ●ack by his father to Mombelga●t where hee preached for a while and then went to Paris to learne the French Tongue and to proceed in his other studies Anno Christi 1560 he went from Paris to Orleance where he read Hebrew publickly and after a while was made Deacon in that Church and two years after Minister An. Christi 1562 and of his age twenty one which place he undertook there rather than in his own country partly because of the great want of Pastors in the French Churches as also because he agreed with them in his judgement about the manner of Christs presence in the Sacrament At this time there was the most flourishing Church in all France in Orleance consisting of above seven thousand persons that had excellent Pastors over them Into the number of which our Daniel being admitted not long after hee resolved to marry and accordingly viz. 1565 hee married Mary Covet of Paris whose Father had been Advocate to the Queen Mother in the Parliament of Paris and whose Mother being a Widdow and having embraced the Reformed Religion transplanted her self with her two daughters to Orleance for the freer exercise of her Religion Whilst he was there the Civil Wars brake out between the Papists and Protestants and Francis Duke of Guise besieged the City of Orleance where Monsieur de Andelot brother to the Admiral of France commanded in chief Tossan continued there all the time of the siege and took extraordinary pains in instructing exhorting and encouraging both Citizens and souldiers and when the City was in great danger to be lost one Poltrot who had devoted his life for his Countries safety went out and slew the Duke of Guise under the walls whereupon the siege was raised and the Church there preserved almost miraculously from ruin Anno Christi 1567 there brake out a second Civill War at which time the Papists in Orleance conspired together to destroy all the Protestants so that they were every hour in danger of being butchered but it pleased God seasonably to send Monsieur Novie with a small party of souldiers who entring the City and joyning with the Protestants drave out some of the Papists and disarmed the rest But after that famous battel at Saint Denis wherein so many of both sides were slain and wounded Peace was againe concluded Yet did the Papists quickly break it and a great company of Souldiers entering into Orleance beganne to breath forth threatnings against the Church of Christ especially against the Ministers of it Hereupon Tossan was in great danger insomuch that when he went into the Church to preach he knew not whether he should returne alive and that which most troubled him was the fear that he had of his wife and two small children Besides he never went to the Congregation but some threw stones others shot bullets at him and their rage grew so great that they burned down the barn wherein the Church used to meet together and every day he heard of one or other of their members that were slain so that he was compelled severall times to change his lodging yet one day the souldiers caught him and pretended that they would carry him out of the City but indeed intended to have Murthered him whereupon his wife great with child ranne to the Governour and with much importunity prevailed with him that her husband might stay in the City And not long after brake out the third Civill War at which time the Popish souldiers that besieged Orleance were so enraged that they burned all the places where the Church used to meet and barbarously slew above eighty of the faithfull servants of Christ in them yet it pleased God miraculously to preserve the Ministers in that great danger and Tossan with his Colleagues by the help of some of the faithfull was conveighed privately away out of the City in the night but whilst hee sought to hid chim in a wood he fel into an ambush and was taken and carried prisoner into a Castle not far off from Orleance His wife which stayed behind in the City hearing this sad news left no means untried for his delivery and at last for a great summe of money shee procured his release whereupon he went to Agrimont and his wife putting her self into the habit of a Maid-servant went towards Agrimont after him where Renata the daughter of Lewis the twelfth of France and Dowager of Ferrara lived in a very strong Castle and was a great friend to the Protestants entertaining many that fled to her for succour But as his wife was going thitherward after him she was taken by some Souldiers and carried back to the Governour of Orleaence but it pleased God to stir up the Governours wife and daughters to intercede for her
the pestilent Heresie of Arius Yea a while after the Emperour himself began to favour that opinion and so by little and little it was spread everywhere first the Emperours Guard took it up then it busied the mindes of the multitude in the City the Emperours Chamberlains in the very Pallace began to contend with women about it And this woful Effect followed the countenancing of this Heresie that in every House and Family through the City they brawled and went together by the ears about it Yea this infection spread it self quickly through other Regions and Countries and the controversie much like a spark of fire kindled the mindes of the hearers with the fiery flame of discord and dissention For every one that desired to know why they made tumults by and by had occasion given him to reason and every one was not satisfied with questioning but contentiously would argue thereof By these means the peaceable and quiet state of the Church was turned upside down But in the interim it pleased God that this flame kept in the East whilest the Western Church injoyed peace and quietness For by no means would they suffer the Canons of the Nicene Council to be violated or made null After the heat of contention was blown abroad and burned more and more the Faction of Eusebius doubted not but it would turn to their great advantage for they hoped that it would come to pass that some Bishop would be chosen of Alexandria that would favour and advance their opinion But at the very same time Athanasius returned unto Alexandria carrying along with him Letters from Constantine the Younger who was one of the Emperours The tenour whereof was this Constantine Caesar to the People of the Catholick Church of Alexandria sendeth greeting I hope it is not unknown to your discreet wisdoms that Athanasius the Professor of sacred Divinity was for a time banished into France least that through the mischievous dealing of lewd men for blood suckers and cruel beasts sought to bereave him of his life he should privily be slain wherefore that he might be sheltred from the malice of those despiteful men he was taken out of their jaws and was commanded to live under my Dominion where I took care that he might be fully furnished with all things needful as if he had been in the City where formerly he lived And when as our Lord and Father of famous memory Constantine the Emperour had intended to restore him to his Bishoprick again he was prevented by death before he could accomplish his desires I thought it my part and duty therefore to execute the intent of so godly an Emperour With what estimation and reverence I have entertained the man he shall report with his own mouth at his return to you neither is there any marvel that I shewed him such courtesie For me thought that I saw in him the great longing ye had for him and I beheld also the Fatherly reverence and gravity of the man himself all which moved me not a little thereunto God of his goodness Wel-beloved Brethren have you in his tuition Athanasius upon the confidence of these Letters returned unto Alexandria whom the people received with most willing mindes But such in that City as were infected with the Leprosie of Arianism conspired against him so that many tumults and skirmishes were raised which gave occasion to the confederates of Eusebius to accuse Athanasius falsely to the Emperour that of his own private spirit without the consent of the Assembly of the Bishops he had setled himself in that Church This odious accusation so far incensed the Emperour Constantius that he sent one Gregory an Arian to be Bishop of Alexandria and with him Syrianus a Captain with 5000 Souldiers to drive out Athanasius and to settle Gregory in his room the Arians which were in the City joined themselves with them to help them It was then even-tide and the people were assembled in the Church to prepare themselves for the Sacrament which was the next day to be administred The Captain drew nigh set his Souldiers in battail array and beset the Church Athanasius understanding the danger devised how the people might take no harm for his sake whereupon he commanded his Deacon to read the Collects to the people and after that to sing a Psalm and as the Psalm was sweetly and harmoniously sung all the people went out at one of the Church doors and it pleased God that the Souldiers had no power to meddle with them and Athanasius in the midst of the Singers escaped also without any harm and Gregory took possession of the Church whilest Athanasius being thus through Gods mercy delivered went in all hast to Rome About this time Constantine the younger was slain by the souldiers and Constance the youngest of the three Emperours remained Emperour of the West Athanasius coming to Rome complained to the Bishop Julius of the great wrong which was done to him the like did divers others of the Eastern Bishops who were unjustly thrust out by the Arians Hereupon Julius wrote freely unto the Bishops of the East requiring them to restore those Bishops to their places again sharply rebuking such as had ra●hly and unjustly procured their deposition The wronged Bishops trusting to Julius his Letter returned every man to his own Church conveying the Letters unto whom they were written who when the Letters came to their hands took it very hainously that Julius should interpose in that cause and thereupon summoned a Council at Antioch In the mean time Athanasius being come to Alexandria there was great stir and many tumults were raised by Gregory and the Arians against him they also forged and divulged this slander viz. That whereas Constantine the Great had given certain grain for Alms to relieve the Poor of the Church of Alexandria this say they Athanasius had sold and converts it to his own private lucre the Emperour takes this slanderous report for truth and threatneth him with death which Athanasius hearing of fled and hid himself in a secret and obscure place At length Julius Bishop of Rome being informed where he lay hid sent for him and when he was come to Rome he acquainted the Emperour Constance with all the injuries which were done to him This good Emperour being much affected with that sad relation wrote to his Brother in the East requesting him to send to him three men that would justifie the accusations against Athanasius Accordingly there were sent Narcissus the Cilician Theodore the Thracian ●aris the Calcedonian and Marcus the Syrian But when they came to Rome they would by no means reason with Athanasius only they exhibited to the Emperour a certain Form of Faith and so took their leave without reasoning of any other matter Not long after the Western Bishops assembled in a Council at Sardis where Athanasius was acquit from the crimes charged upon him and thereupon Constance
lose his freedom And that in the life of Ministers and Bishops there was a great deal of danger that will he nill he he must be intangled with riches honours and cares of the World and thereby be cast upon many temptations Besides the lives of many of them displeased him seeing the ancient Piety of the Ministry to begin to degenerate into Pride and Tyranny All these things seriously considered he began to be in love with a Monastick life which in those times did far differ from their lives in future Ages which was afterwards intangled with Ceremonies and Superstitions For in those times they had liberty to change their condition when they pleased to go whither they pleased they had a great deal of freedom to attend their studies betaking themselves to Fasting and Prayer they were not bound under any humane constitutions Their Apparel was mean yet not enjoyned but left to every ones free will not which was noted for prodigious novelty so that every one might point at them with the finger but which was most agreeable with Christian simplicity they were tyed by no Vows but such as every true Christian ought to be subject to Having resolved upon this course of life his next endeavour was to associate some companions to him therein But Pammachius who hitherto had been his chamber-fellow and fellow-student for his course of life was wholly of another disposition The greatest freedom was most pleasing to Hierom and a married life to Pammachius Bonosus having setled his affairs forsaking his Country Parents and Friends and only accompanyed with his Books was departed into a solitary Island and therein had out-run Hierom extricating himself from the snares of the World to enjoy more freedom in the service of Christ. Not long after Hierom having setled his affairs and provided things necessary for his journey especially a fair Library he sailed into Syria having Heliodorus for his companion who having remained a while with him in Syria disliking that course of life left him Yet did not Hierom at all break off his good esteem of him for the same Then did Hierom go to Hierusalem veiwing all the observable places about that once famous City But shortly after by reason of the change of Ayr and Country he fell into a grievous sickness at which time Evagrius entertained him into his house and shewed much kindeness to him Having recovered his health he was inflamed with an earnest desire of prosecuting his former resolution for the manner of his life and thereupon retiring himself into a Desart between the Syrians and Saracens he had no company besides wilde Beasts and Serpents and here and there a Monks Cell that had betaken himself to the same course of life as Hierom now did But before his fixing in this Wilderness he spent some time in Antiochia which yet he stayed not long in partly by reason of the celebrity of the place and partly because of a Schism that was in the Church Neither could he stay long in Chalcis because of the neighbourhood of some Arians which molested him and indeed this holy man was grievously vexed by their wicked practises who daily cited him before them to give an account of his Faith In brief he met with so many molestations that many times he repented his coming into Syria And thereupon at length he shut up himself far from the commerce of men in that forenamed Desart thinking it far better to live amongst Thieves and wilde Beasts then amongst such Christians And continuing there four years together he only conversed with Christ and his Books seriously busying himself according to his former purpose And having in his youth fallen into some loosness the first thing he did was with showres of tears to bewail his sins and to endeavour to make his peace with God Then by abstinence watchings and incredible austeritty of life to beat down his body and to bring it into subjection to his spirit that so he might be freed from all temptations to fleshly lusts and left his carnal affections should impede his heavenly life he prescribed and exacted of himself a daily task wherein he was imployed He distributed his time into two parts one for his studies the other for meditation and prayer wherein also he spent a good part of the night He allowed himself the least part for sleep less for his food and none for idleness when he was aweary of study he betook himself to Prayer or singing of a Psalm and then presently returned to his studies again He read over all his Library and then rubbed up his old studies He learned most of the Scripture by heart He meditated much upon the Prophets labouring to finde out the Mysteries of their Prophesies He extracted Christian wisdom out of the Evangelists and Apostolical Writings as out of most pure Fountains For it is the first step to Piety to acquaint our selves with the Truths of God Then he read over the Works of such as had Commented thereon with great Judgement not pretermitting the Works of Ethnicks and Hereticks For he knew how to gather Gold out of a Dunghil and Honey out of Weeds leaving the Poyson to Spiders then did he collect what he could out of the Egyptian Writers endeavouring to beautifie the House of God by the spoils of his Enemies And for the help of his Memory and to make him more prompt he digested all that he read into certain heads and common places ●ut especially he read over Origens Works whom he called Suum his own and some of whose Homilies whilest he was a young man he had turned into Latin His reading also he mixed with writing About this time he interpreted the Prophesie of Obadiah Allegorically because he knew not the History as himself afterwards confessed in his Preface to his second Interpretation of that Prophesie in which he makes amends for his former youthly precipitation In brief he pretermitted nothing that might make him an admirable Doctor of the Church and a most accomplished Divine that nothing might be wanting in his Learning nothing amiss in his Life which might any whit tend to the diminishing of the credit of his Doctrine Afterwards also finding by experience that many secrets could not be understood nor handled as they ought to be without learning those Languages wherein they were first written and taught by hard study and industry he overcame the difficulties which are in the Hebrew tongue Yea he did not only labour for the knowledge of it but to give the right sound and pronuntiation to some barbarous and strange Languages which he studied And for his perfecting in the Hebrew he did with great charges hire the most learned of the Jews to instruct him emptying his Purse to enrich his Soul with Learning He also learned the Chalde because the Books of Job Daniel and some other Portions of the Old Testament though they were written in Hebrew yet much use of
prevailed with him that he sold his Plate and was more open-handed to the Poor He wrote many things but not seeking his own honour would never suffer them to he printed yet afterwards some few were published As his Catechism in Dutch An Explication of certain heads in Divinity A defence of the Christian Religion An Oration wherein he defended the Marriage of Ministers As also of the Decalogue Lords Prayer and Belief The Life of Vitus Theodorus who dyed Anno Christi 1549. VItus Theodorus was born at Norinberg one of the most famous Cities in Germany and after he had been trained up in his Country School he went to Wittenberg where he continued many years applying himself hard to his studies and by his diligence and attending upon the Lectures both publick and private he made such a progress in Learning that he commenced Master of Arts with the good approbation of the University After which he betook himself to the study of Divinity and attained to an excellent measure of knowledge therein So that he was very dear to Luther both for the eminent gifts of his minde and for the holiness of his Life as also to Melancthon Both whose Lectures he daily attended upon and heard with much diligence and by his good will would never be from their sides He went with Luther An. Chr. 1530. to Coburg in the confines of Franconia during the Diet at Auspurg He was also often present at the Imperial Diets which met about Religion where he disputed wit the Adversaries about the Principal heads of the Controversies He was called to be a Pastor at Norinberg his own country where he preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ with great zeal and Eloquence to the great profit of his hearers and that for many years together in the Church of Sebald till it pleased God to put an end to his labors by translating him out of this vale of tears into his Everlasting Kingdom Anno Christi 1549. Scripsit Annotationes breves into tota Biblia Germanica utilem Ecclesiae operam navavit Lutheri Colligendis expoliendisque Commentariis in Prophetam Micheam in priora undecem Geneseos capita The Life of Paulus Fagius who dyed An. Ch. 1550. PAulus Fagius was born in the Palatinate An. Chr. 1504. of mean parents His Father was Peter Buchlin who was Schoolmaster of Taberna Rhenana the Town where this Paul was born His Mothers name was Margaret His Father brought him up in his own School till he was eleven years old and then sent him to Heidleberg where he was educated under John Brentius and Martin Frechtus till he was about 18 years old and then he went to Strasborough where he taught School to supply his necessities for some years and the study of the Tongues beginning about this time to be in request he applyed himself thereto and became familiar with the most eminent therein as Capito Hedio Bucer Zellius c. who also were happy reformers of the Church of Christ at that time Anno Christi 1527. having attained some competent knowledge in the Languages and other Learning being compelled by poverty he removed to Isna where also he taught School and by his diligence and virtuous carriage approved himself to all There also he married a wife and growing more famous he was called to the Ministry and to a Pastoral charge But the studie of the Tongues flourishing most at Strasborough whither many Exiles resorted for that end he returned thither again and read Hebrew to some with good success And yet in the mean time he so followed the study of Divintiy and applyed himself to Preaching that after two years space he returned with his Family to his friends more learned and better accommodated with outward things Anno Christi 1537. he was recalled to Isna to a Pastoral charge which he discharged with good credit for about five years spending his spare-time in the study of the Hebrew wherein he profited to a miracle so that it was believed that those later ages never produced a more learned man in the Hebrew then Fagius He made use also of a learned Iew called Elias Levita whom he sent for to him from Venice and amongst his other friends there was one Senator of Isna most dear unto him called Peter Bufler by whose assistance he set up a Press and published some Books for the Publick good and when he was faln into want the said Bufler was very bountifull to him But finding that place not so fit for his purpose he thought of changing his seat again Whilst he was at Isna Anno Christi 1541. a great Plague brake forth which caused many especially the richer sort to leave the place Yet before their departure by his zealous and fervent Sermons and Exhortations he prevailed with some to stay and with others to leave their alms behinde them for the relief of the indigent He prevailed also with the Senate upon the Publick purse to hire fit persons to take care of the sick and Fagius himself all the time of the Infection went up and down night and day to comfort those that were visited refusing none no not the Poorest so all acknowledged it no less then a miracle that he was preserved in so contagious a time About the same time the Plague raged much at Strasborough and amongst others snatched away Wolfgang Capito whose place continued void for a year after viz. to the year 1542. whereupon the Commonwealth of Constance which was associated with them of Strasborough in Religion by their Prayers and messengers prevailed to get him to Strasborough first for two years and afterwards for two years more Though before this Philip Prince of Hassia had designed him for a Professor in his University of Marpurg About the beginning of the German● war Frederick the second Prince Elector Palatine purposing to reform the Churches within his Dominion made choice of Fagius who was famous for his Eloquence and Doctrine for that work whereupon he sent for him to Heidleberg to be a Preacher there During his abode at Heidleberg he published divers Books which were very useful for those that studyed the Hebrew Tongue whereupon it seemed good to Bucer Martyr and H●dio who were the ordinary Professors of Divinity in that University that each other week he should read an extraordinary Divinity Lecture and that when any of them were hindred by business or sickness he should supply their rooms Anno Christi 1548. Caesar having prevailed in the war against the Protesta●● the progress of Religion was hindred in the Palatinate and the Interim began to be pressed with great violence and it was resolved that the godly Ministers should be banished especially such as by reason of their great imployments stood as a brazen wall in the way of Antichrist amongst whom Fagius was one who notwithstanding all the threats of the Papists continued constant and
forth of the City and bad him fly for his life But it pleased God that by a fall he brake his legg whereby being again apprehended he was sent prisoner to Rome This business succeeding answerable to their desires they intended presently to fal upon Martyr whereupon they laid wait for him in every place They put in an accusation against him at Rome and in all the Colledges of his Order they stirred up his old enemies against him telling them that now the time was come wherein they might recover their former liberty so they called lientiousness ●nd to be revenged on Pet. Martyr So that by these mens instigations they met at Genoa not as usually the Superiours of the Order but those especially that bore the greatest hate to Martyr or envied him most These men summon Martyr presently to appear as Genoa But he being informed of the snares that were laid for him which his enemies being blinded with malice could not conceal And also being admonished by his friends to take heed to himself there being many that sought his life resolved not to goe to this Assembly but rather to convey himselfe else-whither where he might be safe from the power and malice of his adversaries Hereupon first of all hee conveyed part of his Library to Christopher Brent a Godly Senator of Luca who should take care to send it to him into Germany the other part he gave to the Colledge and so setting all things in order in the Colledge he privily departed out of the City onely with three companions Paul Lacis of Verona who was afterwards Greek Professor at Strasborough Theodosius Trebell and Julius Terentian with whom he continued faithfull unto the death Departing from Luca purposing to visit his owne country he went to Pisa where to some Noble men he administred the Lords Supper and meeting there with some faithful messengers he wrote to Cardinal Pool and to some of his friends at Luca. In these Letters he shewed what great errors and abuses were in the Popish Religion and in the Monasticall life with whom he could no longer communicate with a safe conscience He also shewed the other causes of his departure viz. the hatred and snares laid for him by his enmies He signified also what pains and care he had taken for their instruction and what a grief it was to him that he could not more plainely and openly instruct them in the Christian faith The ring also which was the ensigne of his dignity he sent back shewing that he would not imploy any of the Colledge goods to his private use Coming to Florence he met there with a godly and learned man Bernardin Ochine who being cited to Rome was going thitherward but being warned of the danger by his friends he consulted with Martyr and upon deliberation both of them resolved to leave Italy and to go into Germany And accordingly first Ochine departed and went to Geneva and from thence to Ausburg and two dayes after Peter Martyr followed going first to Bononia then to Ferrara then to Verona where being courteously entertained by his old friends He went thence over the Alps into Helvetia In this journey when he came to Zurick he was very kindly entertained by Bullinger Pellicane and Gualter and by the other Ministers belonging to that City to whom he proffered his service if they needed it but having at this time no place void in the Schools they told him that they much desired his company and pains but for the present they had no imployment for him yet would they gratefully remember his kind profer to them He often used to say that as soon as he came to Zurick he fell in love with that City desiring of God that it might be a refuge to him in this his banishment which prayer was afterwards granted though in the interim God pleased to make use of his labours in other places and Nations for his own glory and the good of many From thence he went to Basil where after he had abode about a month he with Paul Lacis was called to Strasborough by the means of Martin Bucer In which place he was made Professor of Divinity and Lacis of the Greek Tongue There he continued five years in which time he interpreted most of the Bible and what his excellency in teaching was may be hence collected in that being joyned with Martin Bucer a great Divine and eminent for learning yet Martyr was not accounted inferiour to him He was very skilful in Hebrew Greek and Lati●e He had an admirable dexterity in interpreting Scripture was a very acute disputant and used always to express himselfe very clearly knowing that ambiguity of words is the cause of much contention He lived in most intire friendship with his Collegue Master Bucer At Strasborough being unmarried he lived with his friends that came with him out of Italy being contented with a very small stipend which yet afterwards was augmented For having forsaken his Country his honors and riches for the testimony of Christ he thought it unfit to be solicitous or to trouble any about the increase of his stipend the rather because he was of a frugall disposition so that his stipend did not onely suffice but he spared something out of that little towards the support of his friends But finding some inconvenience of living single by the advice of his friends he married an honest and noble Virgin Katherine Damo-martin who afterwards dyed in England without issue having lived with him eight years She was one that feared God was loving to her husband prudent in administring houshold affairs liberal to the poo● and in the whole course of her life pious modest and sober After her death by the command of Cardinal Poole her body was digged up and buried in a dunghill and when he could finde no other cause for it he pretended that it was because she was buried too near to St. Frideswide For though this Cardinall had formerly loved Martyr very well yet when he once forsooke Italy he did not onely give over loving him but shaking off his study of the true Religion which for a time ●e had seemed to like hee became a great hater of Martyr and a bitter prosecutor of the professors of the Truth which occasioned him to deale so with Martyrs Wife seeing that he could not burn her husband as he desired But in Queen Elizabeths daies her body was again taken up and with great solemnity buried in the chiefe place of the Church and to prevent the Popish malice for the time to come her bones were mingled with the bone● of St. Frideswide that they should not be distinguished asunder The occasion of Peter Martyrs going into England was this King Henry the eighth being dead and his son Edward the sixth succeeding by the advice of the Protector Edward Duke of Somerset and Doctor Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury he
some learned and godly men resolved again to travell first intending for Italy but being hindred by reason of the wars he sailed into England where hee might easily hear from his friends if any preferment fell in his own country In England his care was to acquaint himself with such men as were most famous for learning Upon which occasion he fell into the company of Charles Montjoy Son to William Lord Montjoy whom Erasmus had made famous by his writings He used Hyperius very courteously and conferred with him about many things and finding his excellent wit he invited him to his house proffering him a large stipend This offer he embraced and lived most sweetly with him four years imploying himself in his studies all that while Anno Christi 1540 at the charges of Montjoy he visited the University of Cambridge about which time the Lord Cromwell was beheaded and also Doctor Barnes was burned for Religion with some others and on the other side some others suffered death for adhering to the Pope and denying the Kings supremacy There was also published a dangerous Edict against Strangers Hereupon Hyperius resolved to returne into Germany but before he went he visited the University of Oxford and from thence went to London where he bade farewel to Montjoy who would have kept him longer and sailed to Antwerp from which going into his own Country he remained a while quietly with his friends But hearing the fame of the University of Strasborough and of Bucer in particular he was very desirous to goe into those part● and so taking leave of his friends he went to Marpurg intending to get Letters of commendation from Gerard Noviomag to whom he was formerly known to the learned men at Strasborough This was Anno Christi 1541 and of his age 30. His coming was very acceptable to Noviomag who presently sollicited him earnestly to stay at Marpurg assuring him of a Professors place and a liberall stipend And shortly after he dealt with John Ficinus the Princes Chancellor to substitute Hyperius in his own room pleading his age and infirmities which made him unfit to undergoe the burden of his place ●icinus disliked not the motion and therefore sending for Hyperius to him he requested him to stay at Marpurg and to give them some taste of his Learning telling him that if he was liked he might have a good stipend setled on him And shortly after Noviomag dying Hyperius was chosen into his Professors place and so read upon Paul's Epistles where Noviomag had left And thus continuing unmarried years he at last purposed to marry and accordingly Anno Christi 1544 he married Katharine Orthea a vertuous Widdow of good parentage who had two children Her he alwayes loved dearly and had by her six sons and four daughthers In that place he lived two and twenty years performing the duty of his place with admirable fidelity diligence and zeal to promote Religion and Learning And besides his daily task he took somtimes other opportunities to teach the people He set up an order of preaching in the Schools with much labour and trouble himself appointing what subjects should be handled Looking over the young Students Sermons and hearing them in private before they preached them in publick correcting what was amiss either in their voice or gesture Such as did well he commended such as did ill he blamed and endeavoured to reform He instituted also once in two yeares an examination of the Students in Divinity as also a dissertation wherein some question being proposed every one was to give in his judgement upon the same These exercises he set up and diligently promoted them though he had no reward for his pains In his private studies he was very indefatigable alwaies writing reading or meditating whereby he much impaired his health He much desired to call back the Hassians to the example of the Primitive Churches and abolishing the Popish fooleries out of the service of God to establish a holy Scripturall Ecclesiasticall Discipline And in these employments having worne out himself he fell into a great Catarrh and Cough complaining also of the pains of his head breast and sides which often were so great as made him sweat as if he had been seised upon with a Feaver In his sicknesse he conferred much with Divines that came to visit him especially with Wigand Orthius about the University the study of Divinity and Reforming the Church January the thirtieth being the Lordsday when the Sacrament was administred he desired it to be brought to him also receiving it with the rest of his family The day after feeling himself worse he directed his wife what to do after his death as also his children whom he exhorted to feare God honour their Mother and to carry themselves justly and honestly towards all men When many came to visit him he made before them a confession of his Faith professing his constancy in that Doctrine which he had taught them and so taking his leave of them he quietly slept in the Lord anno Christi 1564. and of his age 53. He was very learned in the Tongues better in the Liberall Arts and Philosophy best of all in Divinity and the Ecclesiasticall Histories He had an excellent faculty both in teaching and disputing His labours were such as tended to the shortning of his life In life and manners he was very exemplary in food and apparel alwayes temperate in feasts Modest. In his conference and conversation just and courteous And how dear he was to all both in City and University appeared by those many tears which were shed at his funerall His workes were these De ratione studii Dialectica Rhetorica Arithmetica Geometrica Cosmographica Optica Astronomica Physica in Ethica Aristotelis Scholia De studiosorum vita moribus de Ratione studii Theologi●i De formandis concionibus De Theologo De quotidiana Lectione meditatione sac literarum De Catechesi De publica in paupere● beneficentia De Schol●s Ecclesiasticis De coni●gio Ministrorum De Providentia Dei c. which are particularly set downe by Ve●heiden JO CALVIN The Life of John Calvin who died Anno Christi 1562. MAster John Calvin was borne at Noviodune a Famous City of France June the sixth anno 1509. His fathers name was Gerard Calvin his Mothers Joan Franc● both of good repute of a competent estate Gerard was a very prudent man and therefore well esteemed of both by the Nobility and others of the Country He gave his Son John very liberall education from his childhood From the Grammer-School he sent him to Paris and placed him with Maturinus Corderius a man well esteemed both for his probity and learning of chiefest account amongst all the School-Masters in France for his training up of youth From thence John Calvin was translated to the School at Montacute where he had Hispanus for his Master
his Creed as also the Testimonies of all the Ancients viz. of Ignatius Tertullian Iraeneus and Lactantius by a certaine unheard-of impudence yea did not onely reject all the Orthodox Writers which followed the Nicene Councel but reproached them as wicked men Other Blasphemies also followed this about the Hypostaticall Union He first vented these things in private as hee pretended for Disputation sake to some of the Italian Congregation whereupon an assembly being called on purpose Mr. Calvin before some choice Senators and all the Ministers and Elders having patiently heard them confuted them so fully out of the Word of God that all the Italians presently subscribed to the Orthodox Faith except onely six who afterwards being called one by one subscribed with their hands but not with their hearts as time made to appeare Gentilis therefore returning to his old course and going on to spread his former Blasphemies is apprehended dissembles not his opinion being heard as much and as long as he would At length seeming to be convinced by Mr. Calvin he feigned incredible repentance and gave in a Recantation signed under his own hand Hereupon he was dismissed first taking an oath that he would not goe forth of the gates of the City but presently contrary to the same he flyes into Savoy to Matthew Gribaldus and presently after two of his Disciples Alciat and Blandatra followed him who afterwards proved the infectors of Transylvania and the Countries adjacent But Gods judgement hanging over the head of Gentilis he staied with Gribaldus both of them casting off the other two as illiterate fellows and there he wrote a book against Athanasius and Calvin and so going to Lions he there printed it dedicating it to Gaiensis a Praefect who was altogether ignorant of the blasph● mies contained in it Whilst he was at Lions he was apprehended by the Papists but when he shewed them that hee had written a booke against Calvin he was dismissed as one that had deserved wel of their Church From thence he went into Transylvania to ●landatra Alciat and their companions but they having now sucked in the Heresies of Samosatenus and he not well agreeing with them therein Christ indeed drawing him forth to condigne punishment he returned into Savoy to his friend Gribaldus but Gods plague had now swept away that Pest and Mr. Calvin also was dead at Geneva Hereupon Gentilis either infatuated by God or thinking that there was none left at Geneva that could answer him went strait to Gaiensis who was justly offended with him who there fore presently apprehending him by the just judgement of God sent him to Berne there to be tried where being convicted both of Perjury many manifest impieties after many wayes were used to bring him to repentance but in vain he had his head cut off thereby suffering a just reward for all his impieties Towards the latter end of this year in October Mr. Calvin was taken with a Quartane Ague which Physicians say is deadly to old persons which though it held him but eight mon●ths yet it so debil●tated his lean and overworne body with his in●●ssant lab●urs that he never throughly recovered his health again Yet all this time though his Physicians warned him and his friends disswaded him from his preaching and Lectures yet did he continually busie himself night and day in dictating and writing Letters every way often saying That nothing was more troublesome to him then an idle life At this time also he published the last Edition of his Institutions in French and Latine and his learned Commentary upon Isa●ah The yeare following viz. 1559 was famous for the League entered into between the two most potent Kings of Spain and France which was strengthned by a●linity betwixt them which was likely to prove fatall to Geneva but that the counsell of the Pontificians who abused the simplicity of King Henry of France hindered it For King Henry published most severe Decrees and cast some of his Senators into prison who had declared their judgements freely that he ought to proceed gently in matters of Religion till a Generall Councell could bee called having this in his eye principally to restore the Duke of Savoy to his Country that by his help hee might utterly destroy Geneva In the meane time Master Calvin though sickly laboured hard 〈◊〉 Gen●va comforting and confirming the afflicted Churches and brethren as also by his frequent and servent prayers craving help of God And behold the wonderfull work of God ● whilst all things were ful of terror the King of France in the great Marriage solemnity which was made for the confirmation of the Peace in his running at Tilt received his deaths wound and that by the hand of the Captaine of his Guard by whom a little before he had apprehended and imprisoned the aforesaid Senators This death of the King was expiated as he thought by the Cardinall of Lorraine who upon the one and twentieth of December caused that learned Lawyer faithfull Counsellor and holy Martyr of Christ Annas Du Bourg to be unjustly and cruelly burned But by the singular blessing of God in the midst of these calamitous times the hearts of the Genevians were so raised up and confirmed that in the very same yeare and almost moment of time in which two such potent Kings had contri●ed their destruction by the encouragement of Mr. Calvin they laid the foundation and built a famous Schoole adorning it with eight Masters for boyes as also with Hebrew Greek Philosophy and Divinity Professors which being finished to the honour of God Omnipotent Mr. Calvin in a great assembly in the chiefest Church read and declared those things which conduced to the perpetuall establishment of so holy and profitable a foundation whereby he did as it were solemnly consecrate it The year after which was 1560. Master Calvin was by some loaden with much envy as if he had stirred up an Assembly against Francis the Second the heir of his Fathers Kingdom which Assembly was called The tumult of Amboise whereas indeed Master Calvin never understood what it was as also both by word of mouth and by his Letters to friends he disliked it This year one Sancarus of Mantua Italy being fatall to the Polonians began to teach that Christ was Mediator onely according to his humane nature accusing all of Arianisme that should say that he was Mediator also according to his Deity as if thereby they made the Son lesse then the Father This calumny and all his other Doctrine was notably confuted as by Philip Melancton and Peter Martyr so also Master Calvin at the request of the Polonians did briefly but strongly confute the same and foreseeing what shortly after came to pass that whilst some more unskilful persons would take upon them to confute Sancarus if they took not heed would fall into the error of them which held three Gods He eloquently admonished them
to bring an odium upon the Helvetians and to alienate the Princes affections from them Whereas saith he it is not the manner of the Helvetian Divines to reproach any either in their Sermons or Lectures much lesse Luther who had deserved so well of the Church And although Luther in the controversie about the Sacrament had used much reproachfull language against them yet they never made mention of him but with honour Whereas they were certainly informed that many of the Saxon Ministers used divers reproachfull speeches against them calling them Sacramentarians Image haters blasphemers c. Yea that in his own University of Marpurg Theobald Thammer in his publick Lectures had greatly aspersed them wherefore he earnestly requested him to consider their innocency and to enjoyn silence to such intemperate spirits c. For saith he we cannot with Luther confesse the bread to bee the naturall body of Christ and that Judas and other wicked men received his body as well as Peter and the Saints which are Luthers owne words Yet are we ready to preserve peace so that it be not urged upon us to yeeld to those things which neither our selves can understand nor can wee teach them to others In all other things you shall finde us as peaceable men ready to give an account of our Faith whensoever it shall be required of us The Lantgrave was well satisfied with this answer bearing a great love to the Helvetians and to Bullinger in particular to whom after the Warre was begunne hee often wrote out of his Camp desiring also the Protestant Cantons to send some Auxiliaries to them But upon serious deliberation they denied this request For say they if we shall send you aid the Popish Cantons will also aide the Emperour which hitherto moved by our example they have refused though they have been earnestly solicited both by the Pope and Emperour thereto In the mean time our Ministers cease not daily to pray for the peace of Germany and we have had publick Fasts for that end The same yeare came John Hooper afterwards Bishop of Gloucester to Zurick and lived familiarly with Bullinger by whom he was informed of their opinion about the Sacrament and fully concurred with them Anno Christi 1548 came forth that accursed Interim tending to the overthrow of true Religion which Calvin and Bucer answered though the Printer for fear of the Emperour durst not publish it And the bitter fruit which followed it was the expulsion of many Ministers out of their places divers of which resorted to Zurick and were kindly entertained by bullinger and his Colleagues and commended to divers Protestant Cities in Helvetia though they knew that formerly they had been very violent against them And indeed after their returne into their own Countries forgetting their courtesies they proved so again Anno Christi 1549. Calvin being suspected too much to favour Consubstantiation associating to him Master Farel of Neocom came to Zurick where he conferred with Bullinger and the other Ministers about that question and there was a sweet agreement amongst them which also was published by Calvin and Bullinger and subscribed by all the Helvetian and Rhetian Ministers By which act the Churches of Christ were more strictly united many that were doubtfull were confirmed in the truth and the adversaries took occasion from hence to write more bitterly against them Francis King of France being dead and Henry succeeding he sent to the Helvetians to renew his league with them But Bullinger who was in great authority amongst them did altogether disswade the Tigurines from it teaching them that it was neither just nor lawfull for a man to suffer himselfe to be hired to shed another mans blood who usually was innocent and from whom himselfe had never received any injury c. And hereupon the Tigurines resolved to abstaine from such Leagues Anno Christi 1550 Bullinger published his Decades Sermonum some of which he dedicated to King Edward the sixth and a reformation being now begun in England he wrote upon that occasion to many of our Nobility Bishops and Ministers of our Church Anno Christi 1551 the Helvetians were summoned by a Bull from the Pope to appear at the Councill of Trent by sending their Ministers thither c. Hereupon Master Bullinger consulting with his Fellow-Ministers published a book wherein he declared that the Councill of Trent was gathered for the suppressing of the truth and that the Helvetians owed no subjection to the Pope from under whose yoak they had long since withdrawn their necks About this time there sprange up a contention in the Church of Geneva by reason of one Hierome Bolsecus a Physician who publickly opposed the Doctrine of Master Calvin about Election and boasted that divers other Ministers and particularly Master Bullinger was of his opinion Calvin answered him confuting his error by testimonies of Scripture and out of Saint Augustine but when he would not be satisfied the Senate and brethren of Geneva sent to Zurick to ask their judgements whereupon Bullinger with his brethren did so declare themselves that all might see that they which made Election depend upon faith foreseen and faith upon mans free-will as much as upon the Divine inspiration did maliciously abuse the Tigurine Ministers c. And indeed there was a sweet Harmony between Calvin Bullinger and Peter Martyr about this point Anno Christi 1552 the war waxing hot in Germany and Zurick being afflicted with a Famine Bullinger wrote much for the comforting the afflicted and to stir them up to unfained repentance for their fins whereby they had provoked God against them Anno Christi 1554. a persecution being raised by Queen Mary in England many Nobles and famously learned men fled into Germany and came to Zurick where they erected a Colledg and were by Master Bullinger much holpen therein In the following years viz. 1556 1557 and 1558. Bullinger had divers conflicts with Westphalus Heshusius and others About which time the League amongst the Helvetians being to be renued the Popish Pages would have the oath to be By God and by all his Saints which the Protestant Pages refused and though some Politick men pleaded for the lawfulnesse of it or at least that there should be no contention about so small a matter Bullinger with his Colleagues shewed that an oath being part of Gods worship was onely to be made in the name of the true God who alone was to be called upon and that all appearance of false worship was to be avoided Anno Christi 1560 there arose up one Francis Stancarus who taught That Christ was Mediator onely according to his humane nature Him with some other such Hereticks Calvin and Bullinger confuted as also Blandrata who taught That Christ our Saviour was a meer man and Bernard Ochin who held Polygamie lawfull Anno Christi 1561. Blandrata being gone into Polonia began to discover himself more clearly and
it your own c. His friends hearing him thunder out these things much feared what would become of him And after Sermon some of them told him with tears That now the Bishop had that advantage against him which hee had long looked for c. To whom he answered Be not affraid the Lord God over-ruleth all and if God may bee glorified and his Truth propagated Gods will be done concerning me After they had dined together all men expecting the issue of this businesse Master Gilpin went to take his leave of the Bishop Nay said the Bishop I will bring you home and so went along with him to his house and walking there together in a Parlour the Bishop took him by the hand saying Father Gilpin I acknowledge you are fitter to be Bishop of Durham then my self to be Parson of your Church I ask forgiveness for Errors past Forgive me Father I know you have hatched up some chickens that now seek to pick out your eyes but be sure so long as I am bishop of Durham no man shall injure you Master Gilpin and his friends much rejoyced that God had so over-ruled things that that which was purposed for his disgrace should turn to his greater credit His body being quite worn out with pains-taking at last feeling before hand the approach of death hee commanded the poor to be called together unto whom he made a speech and tooke his leave of them He did the like also to others made many exhortations to the Scholars to his servants and to divers others and so at the last he fell asleep in the Lord March the fourth Anno Christi 1583. and of his Age sixty six Hee was tall of stature slender and hawk-nosed his clothes not costly but frugall in things that belonged to his own body bountifull in things that tended to the good of others especially of the poor and scholars His doores were still open to the poor and strangers He boorded and kept in his owne house four and twenty Scholars most of them poor mens sonnes upon whom hee bestowed meat drink apparel and learning Having a great Parish he entertained them at his Table by course euery Sabbath from Michaelmasse to Easten He bestowed upon his School and for stipends upon the School masters the full sum of 500 pound out of which School he supplied the Church of England with great store of Learned men Hee was carefull not onely to avoyd evil but the least appearance of it Being full of Faith unfeigned and of good works hee was at last put into his grave as an heap of wheat in due time put into the garner Hallelujah The Life of Zacharie Ursin who died A no Christi 1583. ZAcharie Vrsus was borne in Vratislavia the Metropolis of Silesia An. Christ. 1584. of honest parents His Fathers name was Gasper a Minister in Vratislavia who set him to School in the same City where he quickly shewed an excellent wit by which he easily outwent all his schoolfellows and so having perfected his Schol-learning by that he was 16. yeares old having an ample testimony from his Master Andrew Winckle he was sent to Wittenberg An. Chr. 1552 where he heard Melancthon with great diligence two years At the end of which time the Plague breaking forth there he retired with Melancthon to Tergaw and after a while having an ample testimony from him he went thence into his own Country for all that Winter but in the spring hee returned to Wittenberg where he spent five years more in the study of the Arts Tongues and Divinity He was very familiar with Melancthon and much esteemed by many Learned men who flocked to that University out of all Countries with whom also afterwards hee kept correspondencie Anno 1557 he went with Melancthon to the conference at Wormes about Religion and from thence he travelled to Marpurg Strasbor●ugh Basil Lansanna and Geneva where he grew into familiar acquaintance with many learned men especially with Calvin who gave him such bookes as he had printed From Geneva he went into France to Lions Orleance and Paris where he perfected his skill in the Hebrew under the learned Mercerus In his return he went to Zurick where hee acquainted himself with the learned men and so to Tubing Ulme Nerinberg and from thence to his old Master Melancthon Anno 1558 hee was sent for by the Senate of Uratislave which was his native place to govern the school in that City where besides his Lectures in the Arts and Tongues he was employed in the explication of Melancthons book of the Ordination of Ministers upon which occasion he declared his judgement about the Sacrament and thereupon he was cried out against for a Sacramentarian This caused him to give a publick account of his Faith about the Doctrine of the Sacraments in certain strong and accurate propositions Melancthon hearing of the opposition which hee met with wrote to him to stand firmely to the truth and if he enjoyed not peace in that place to returne to him again and to reserve himself for better times And accordingly Ursin who naturally abhorred brawles and in his judgement could not endure Ecclesiasticall contentions chose rather to leave the place and therefore requested of the Senate that he might be dismissed and obtained his desire upon condition that whensoever his country and the Church there had need of him he should be willing to return home to them again This fell out seven daies after the death of Melancthon Anno Christi 1560. Ursin had a reverend man to his Uncle called Albert Roth who asked him whither hee would goe To whom he answered thus Truly I doe not goe unwillingly out of my own country seeing they will not admit of my confession of the Truth which with a good conscience I could not omit And if my worthy Master Melancthon were now living I would goe to none but him But since he is dead I will goe to Zurick which though it be not esteemed here yet in other Churches it is very famous for there are such godly learned and eminent men that they cannot be obseured by our Preachers and with them through Gods mercy I hope to live with much comfort And thus hee left his Country to the great grief of the godly whom he had instructed and confirmed in the Orthodox Truth From Uratislavia hee went to Wittenberg where he was received by the Professors with great joy and who would have chosen him into their number but hee refused and so went to Zurick Anno 1560 being invited thither by Martyr Bullinger Simler Lavater Gualter Gesner and Frisius who much desired his company and wrote for him With these worthy men he lived pleasantly and comfortably addicting himselfe to the profit of the Church and being a diligent attender upon Peter Martyrs Lectures whereby hee much encreased his knowledge in Divinity Anno Christi 1561 there came
Catalogum Consulum Romanorum alia opuscula Item de consolatione decumbentium De idea boni Pastoris De concionibus Funebribus M. CHEMNICIVS The Life of Martin Chemnisius who died A no Christi 1586. MArtin Chemnisius was born at Britza in Old March Anno Christi 1522 of honest but mean Parents so that his father being poor he met with many impediments to discourage and hinder him in Learning yet bearing a great love to it by his exceeding industry he overcame all difficulties and after some progresse at home he went to Magdeburg where he studied the Tongues and Arts. And from thence to Frankfurt upon Oder where he studied Philosophy under his Kinsman George Sabin● and after hee had spent some time there he went to Wittenberg where he prosecuted his former studies together with the Mathematicks under Melancthou and other Professors From thence he went to Sabinum in Borussia where he taught School and commenced Master of Arts and Anno Christi 1552 he was made the Princes Library-keeper and had a competent subsistence in the Court. At that time he wholly applied himself to the study of Divinity By reason of his knowledge and skill in the Mathematicks and Astronomy he was very dear to the Duke of Borussia and for the same cause John Marquesse of Brandenburg favoured him very much Yea by his modest and sincere carriage hee procured much favour from the Courtiers Anno Christi 1555 Chemnistus being desirous after three years stay in the Court to return to the Universities for the perfecting of his studies was rewarded by Prince Albert with ample Letters of commendation and so dismissed After which he went again to Wittenberg where he sojourned with Melancthon and was imployed by him publickly to read Common places From thence after a while he was sent to Brunople in Saxonie by the Senate and made Pastor which place he discharged with singular fidelity and approbation for the space of thirty years partly as Pastor and partly as Superintendent and commenced Doctor in Divinity at Rostoch serving the Church with great faithfulness and commendations both by preaching and reading Lectures Many Princes and Commonwealths made use of his advice and assistance in Ecclesiastical affairs He took great pains in asserting the Truth against the adversaries of it as his excellent Exame● of the Tridentine Council shews At last being worn out with study writing preaching c. he resigned up his spirit unto God Anno Christi 1586 and of his age 63. He is said by one to be Philosophus summus Theologus profundissimus neque veritatis bonarumque artium studio neque laude officit facile cuiquam secundus His Workes are these De origine Jesuitarum Theologiae Jesuitarum praecipua capita Explicatio Doctrinae de duabus in Christo naturis Fundamenta sanae Doctrinae Enchiridion de praecipuis caelestis Doctrinae capitibus De peccato Origin contra Manichaeos Examen decretorum Concilii Tridentini Concio de Baptismo Harmonia Evangelica The Life of Rodolphus Gualter who died Anno Christi 1586. ROdolphus Gualter was born in Zurick An. Christi 1519. When he first applyed his mind to the study of humane Arts and Tongue hee had such an happy wit that he was inferiour to none of his fellows in Poetry and Oratory and being afterwards admitted into the University he became famous first for his knowledge in the Arts and afterwards of Divinity He was chosen Pastor in that City where first he drew his vitall breath neither were which chose him deceived in their expectation for he proved an admirable instrument of Gods glory and their good discharging his place with fingular industry diligence and fidelity not onely by his frequent publick preaching but by his learned private writings as his Homilies upon much of the Old and New Testament do sufficiently declare And having governed and sed that Church for above forty years together he died in a good old age Anno Christi 1586 and of his Life seventie four Scripsit Homilias in Johannis Epistolas In can●cum Zachariae De Nativitate pueritia educatione Domini De servitnte peccati libertate fidelium De origine prastantia authoritate S. Scripturae In 12 Prophetas minores In Ma●thaum Marcum Lucam Johannem Acta Apostol Epist. ad Romanes ad Corinthios ad Galatas In Esaiam With many other Works set down by Verheiden The Life of Ludovicus Lavater who died A no Christi 1586. LUdovicus Lavator was born in Zurick a famous City of the Helvetians and having drunk in the first Rudiments of Learning became famous by his diligence in the Schooles and his excellent wit insomuch as Bullinger gave his daughter in marriage to him And though a Prophet be not without honour but in his own country yet was he chosen a Pastor in that City and made a Lecturer in the Schooles and hee taught and illustrated both faithfully by his Ministry and Writings He published manys his Father-in-law Bullingers Works And having spent himelf in the Work of the Lord and service of his Church he quietly resigned up his spirit into the hands of his heavenly Father Anno Christi 1586. He wrote Commentaries upon Joshuah both books of the Chronicles Ruth Ester Job Proverbs and Ezekiel Besides his Historia de ortu progressu controversiae Sacramentariae Tractatus de spectris lemuribus fragoribus variisque praesagitionibus quae plerumque obitum hominum magnas clades praecedunt With divers others mentioned in particular by Verheiden GAS. OLEVIAN The Life of Gaspar Olevian who died A no Christi 1587. GAspar Olevian was born in Trevir Anno Christi 1536. His Fathers name was Gerhard a Baker in that City and Master of his Company but this Gasper was carefully brought up in learning by his Grandfather who set him to severall Schooles in that City and at thirteen years old hee was sent to Paris to study the Civill Law from thence also hee went to the Universities of Orleance and Biturg where hee heard the most famous Lawyers of those times He joyned himself also to the Congregation of Protestants which met privately together in both those Cities In Biturg he was admitted into the Order of Lawyers after the solemn manner of the University being made Doctor Anno Christi 1557. About which time there studyed in that Universitie under Nicholas Judex the young Prince Palatine sonne to Frederick the third afterwards Elector And Olevian being very intimate with Judex went one day after dinner to the River Lieg hard by the City together with him and the young Prince and when they came thither they found some young Noble Germans that were students there going into a boat who desired the Prince and his Tutor to goe over the River with them But Olevian perceiving that they had drunk too freely diswaded them from venturing themselves amongst
The Life of Anthony Wallaeus who died Anno Christi 1639. ANthony Wallaeus was descended of the ancient family de Wale in the City of Gaunt where his Predecessors had born sundry offices from the year 1345 to that present time his Father was James Wallaeus who was brought up in the Family of Count Egmond who lost his head by the Spanish tyranny His Mother was Margaret Wagenaer a beautifull and pious Matron of an illustrious Family and powerfull Kindred Our Anthony was born Octob. 3. Anno Chr. 1573 in the City of Gaunt just at the same time when the Duke de Alva after all his cruelties exercised in the Low Countryes returned into Spain His Mother in his childhood was very carefull to traine him up in the Rudiments of piety and good manners and his Father was as careful to give him liberall education For which end when he could read and write reasonable well at eight years old he committed him to the care of Titus ab Edingen a Minister to be taught the Latine tongue The boy was very beautifull of a ruddy colour of a sweet and pleasing conversation and therefore his Master loved him above all his other Scholars Not long after this Titus of Edingen was called into Holland to be Minister at Saint Hildegond near to Harlem whereupon our Anthony was necessitated to return to his parents at Gaunt and was by his Father committed to the care of Samuel Lansberg a Minister in that City to be by him further instructed in the Latine tongue About this time the City of Gaunt was full of factions and divisions so that his Father for favouring the Prince of Orange was clapt up in prison whereupon our Anthony returned home to his Mother and by his prompt obedience sweet manners childish blandishments was a great comfort to her during the time of her husbands close imprisonment But at last his Father was set free who considering the troublesom state of the City and not knowing what might be the issue sent away all his most precious moveables to Delph in Holland Shortly after Gaunt was besieged by the Prince of Parma which being foreseen by Jam. Wallaeus he had made such provision before hand that he lived quietly and comfortably during all the siege But at last the City was to be surrendred upon Articles amongst which this was one that six such Citizens should be delivered up to the Prince as he should nominate James Wallaeus upon good grounds suspecting that he should be one of the six a few dayes before the surrender privately stole out of the City and went to Walochrta His Wife Margaret staying at Gaunt to dispose of her goods was so vexed and abused by the Citizens that she resolved rather to leave part of them and goe her wayes then to stay there any longer and because all were forbidden to depart from the City taking her son Anthony who was now tenne years old and her two daughtets they stole away in the night and went on foot to Philippine And shortly after not onely the Citizens of Gaunt but of all the neighbouring places did so molest and abuse the Protestants that they forced them to leave their habitations and to seeke for refuge in other Countries most of which went into Zeland which of all other places shewed the most humanity bounty and hospitality to these p●o● exiles Yet lest under pretence of flight the enemies should mingle themselves amongst the Protestants and so make some ate●pt upon the Isles of Zeland the Zelander● sent some ships of War to Philippine under the conduct of James Wallaeus with a special charge that none should be brought out of Flanders into Zeland but such as he should approve of In the mean time Margaret and our Anthony went to Delph in Holland to fetch away their goods which formerly were sent thither but their friend to whom they had sent them denyed that great part of them ever came to his hands and they wanting sufficient proof were faign to take such as he acknowledged and so they returned to Middleborough James Wallaeus had so well demeaned himself in the aforementioned imployment that the President of Zeland who had formerly known him at Gaunt committed to his care the custody of the Magazine for Provision and Ammunition and because he would not wholly trust his servants in so weighty a businesse he imployed his son Anthony to have an oversight of them who though he was but 11. years old yet was serious and prudent above his Age. His place was to see such things as his Father bought laid up the Publick Granary and Armory as also to see them delivered out and divided to the several Cities as he was appointed and to acquaint his Father where there was any want And thus he was imployed for two years at the end whereof his Father resolved to settle him with his Mother at Middleborough that he might be fitted for some honest course of life But having lost much of his Estate by his Exile and his Family being encreased by the birth of two sons he durst not think of training him up in Learning as formerly he had determined wherefore that he might be fitter for any future imployment he placed him with Jodocus Larenus a Publick Notary a man of much experience of a great judgement and of unspotted honesty with whom by his daily practise he attained to much swiftness in writing and as things were related to him he could readily apprehend fitly word them and draw them into a publick instrument in good order which some Merchants taking notice of each of them strove to get him into his Family profering him good pay for his pains But our Anthony being not yet resolved what course of life to follow continued three years with Larenus At the end whereof lying one night with his Father on the straw he had a sudden instinct that God had designed him for the Work of the Ministry and these thoughts did so follow him night and day wheresoever and about whatsoever he was that he could not blot them out of his memory Hereupon at last he resolved to dedicate himself to his studies and having gotten leave of his Father he went to the Grammer School in Middleborough the chief Master whereof was Iames Gruter a painful man and well versed both in Greek and Latine He had also for his assistant Iohn Murdison who was an acute and solid Philosopher This Murdison lived with Gruter who being desirous to finde out the ingenie of our Anthony he placed him at Gruters Table yet least he should be drawn aside by rude lads his Parents would have him daily to come home to supper With these Masters hee lived six years and profited so much under them that he could make elegant Verses and pronounce Orations publickly which Gruter thought fit both for his own and his Scholars credit to publish in Print Neither did he profit less in the