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

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his flock But the Pope of Rome was so busie against the Pope of Avenion that neither of them had leasure to attend such matters and Wickliff did return It happened that he became sick and there was little hope of his recovery the Friers sent four of their Order and four elder men unto him and wished him then in the hour of his death to recant his former opinions He desired his friends to set him up and then said with a loud voice I shall not die but live and declare the most wicked facts of Friers they left him with confusion and he did recover and wrote a Treatise against the Order of Friers of which Treatise Doctor James maketh mention in his Book called Wickliff's conformity to the Church of England An. 1382. they assembled a Convocation against him to condemn his Doctrine and Books in the very hour of their first meeting all England was shaken with an earth-quake that all who were assembled thought it expedient to surcease for that time At last he died in peace in Lutterworth where he had been Parson An. 1387. Such a God is the Lord that whom he will keep nothing can hurt John Bale hath a catalogue of his Books in five full pages and Aen. Silvius in Histor Bohem. testifieth that more of his Books were extant than of Augustine The late Papists do impute many errors unto him and so did the Councel of Constance but others have cleared him of those imputations especially the above named Antiquary Doctor James And that the reader may see the falshood of those criminations this is one that he condemned all oaths therein savoring of Anabaptism But by the testimony which I have cited out of The path-way it is clear that he speaketh of customary and false swearing and in that same Chapter he saith that to swear by any is the honor of God alone and therefore it is Idolatry to swear by any Saint or creature and by this one instance it may be judged of others The Councel of Constance ordained to take up his body and burn it and so the English Prelates took up his bones forty and one years after his death to burn them such was their rage against the professors of truth At that time happened a rebellion in Ireland Richard A prank of the Bishops the II. went to suppress it while he was there Thomas Arundel Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the other Bishops stole away the hearts of his subjects from him because he had hearkened to the doctrine of Wickliff and perswaded them to advance Henry Earl of Derby to the Crown to the end that both they might be rid of such a Soveraign and have a King for ever obliged to authorise their bloody designs against God's people but all their treason and cruelty could not smother the truth It is bitterly enough marked saith Io. Bale Cent. 6. 25. in Appen that the Earl of Salisbury despised confession Many were called Lollards and the Popish Sacraments at his death Sir John Montague threw down all Images within his Lands John Purvey wrote Books in defence of his Master's Lessons he wrote a Commentary on the Revelations where he saith Seven years are past since the Pope of Rome was generally made known to be the Antichrist to wit from the year 1382. Behold how God bringeth light out of darkness I had not written such things against Antichrist and his Prelates if they had not imprisoned me lest I did speak against them There he applieth all the prophesies concerning Antichrist and the Whore unto the Pope and his Court. The Arch-Bishop had imprisoned this Purvey and by cruel torments caused him to recant seven godly Articles at Paul's Cross but when he was at liberty he spoke more boldly and accused the Pope for denying that the Word of God is sufficient to salvation without the Decrees and Decretals He said also Spiritual men write Books against the Pope and these Books are either hid or burnt nor is any man suffered to preach but which are devoted unto the Pope and good men are drawn into prison but said he more Books and more vehement shall be written against the Pope For these and such other things Henry Chichelay Successor to Thomas imprisoned him again An. 1393. Walter Bruite was in question before the Bishop of Hereford and delivered a book yet extant saith Geo. Abbot against Hill in answer to the first reason in the Register of that Diocy wherein he wrote these and many such positions Bread remaineth in the Sacrament after the consecration the Pope is the Antichrist nothing is to be believed as necessary to salvation but what may be confirmed by Scripture the City described in Revel 7. is Rome justification is freely by Christ alone miracles now are no assurance of truth infants dying before baptism are not therefore condemned auricular confession is not prescribed in the Scriptures the Canon Law is ill grounded the numeral letters of DVX CLERI make up the number 66● worship of Images is Idolatry that men are not rashly to be reputed Saints the Pope hath no power beyond other Saints nor is the head of the Church Papists mistake the keys of binding and loosing the Pope deceiveth men in his pardons absolution is to be sought at the hands of God only Priests use vain prayers in the Mass exorcisms and holy water are unlawful Priests do sin who bargain to sing for the souls of men departed religious men and women are the devourers of widows houses selling of Orders and Dirges is naught the Pope is the Beast with the two horns like the Lamb while he challengeth the double sword temporal goods may be taken from the Clergy offending The same Author loc cit sect 25. saith Yea so far was the Doctrine of Wickliff spread the Pope Gregory XI in the year 1378. did direct his Bull to the University of Oxford against the Doctrine and Articles of that learned man even Rome it self ringing of his opinions in that University neither did his followers die when he died but long after that Pope Gregory the XII did direct another Bull to Oxford in which he useth the same words which his Predecessor had that is that Wickliff did follow the doctrine of Marsilius of Padua and of John of Gandune of unworthy memory Which speech is worth the marking saith Abbot to shew that this man had his predecessors The Copy of this latter Bull is to be seen in a Book which that worthy lover of Antiquities Mr. Hare gave to our University saith he 13. In time of the rebellion against King Richard amongst all the Bishops only Thomas Merks Bishop of Carlile was for him In the Parliament they were not content to depose him but were devising more mischiefs against him Then said Thomas None here present is worthy to pass his sentence on so worthy a King whom they have obeyed as their lawful Prince full twenty two years this is the part of traitors cut-throats
Lewis who died in a battel against the Turks An. 1528. and then the covenant was accomplished and the house of Austria are Kings of Hungary After the death of Ladislaus was strife also for the Dutchy of Austria three Brethren the Emperor Albert and Sigismund contend for it they did name some Umpires to decide the controversie but it is hard to judge against the mighty Frederick carried it But in the year 1463. Albert besieged his brother in the Castle of Vienna so streightly that the Emperour sent for relief unto George King of Bohemia whom he was wont to despise as an Heretick and he sent unto Pope Pius intreating him that he would not accurse George with his Thunder the Pope yeelded because of that necessity saith Naucler And the Bohemians delivered the Emperour but so warily that he neither did perish nor was victorious In the year 1466. Frederick went to Rome some say to perform a vow others say to treat with the Pope concerning Wars against the Turk whatsoever was his purpose he returned in peace and by his means peace continued in Italy and Germany At that time Charls surnamed The Hardy Duke of Burgundy Flanders Gelderland Holland c. durst hold all the World for his enemies and spared not to invade and take Towns where he pleased He had a conference with the Emperour at Lutzemburg and amongst other purposes he demanded the Title of the Kingdom of Naples because it sometime had belonged unto the Empire and now he intended to make Conquest of Italy The Emperour knowing and misliking his ambition gave him fair words and departed the City in the night Wherefore the Duke besieged Colein The Emperour came against him with a great Army yet desirous of peace They were both induced to agree and Charls left the bounds of the Empire But he could not live in peace he intended to march into Italy and to molest the Switzers in his way but he was killed by them in the year 1476. Then the French the Switzers and others repossessed themselves of what Charls had taken from them and Maximilian the Emperour's son married the only daughter of Charls and kept his inheritance not without troubles In the year 1480. Mahumet having conquered the Islands of Archipelagus invaded Italy his Bassa Acomath took Otranto and some other places all Italy was in fear Mahumet died and his son Bajazeth was molested with Civil wars so Italy was freed In the year 1486. Frederick caused his son Maximilian to be chosen King of the Romans and made several Statutes under great penalties against all that should disturb the peace of Germany The year 1492. is remarkable first for the death of Pope Innocentius and election of Alexander the VI Next for expelling the Moors out of Spain by Ferdinand King of Castile above 700. years after their first arrival it is written that 224000. families of the Jews were banished Thirdly under the name of the same Ferdinand Christopher Columbus sailing Westward discovered the Isles Azores as Americus Vespusius in the year 1499. discovered the West-Indies which after him was called America Pope Alexander gave that Kingdom unto Ferdinand When this gift was reported unto Artabaliba King of Peru he said That Pope must be a fool who gave unto another what he never had or certainly he is impudent and unjust who gives another man's Lands unto strangers and stirreth up men to the shedding of innocent blood as Benzo Lopez do record When all the Empire was in peace Frederick died An. 1493. The Reign of his son was for the most part in the next Century CHAP. III. Of Divers Countries 1. IT were tedious to repeat all the strange Eclipses of the Sun and Moon Ominous signs which are recorded to have been in this Century portending the wondrous darkness of the ignorance of these times as indeed it surpassed all others since no age had seen more ungodly Popes nor greater ignorance of the Clergy The inundations of waters the frequent pestilence and famine did also proclaim the wrath of God against the iniquity of men but the more God did strike the stithies of their hearts they became the harder except a small number in respect of the ungodly multitude who therefore were had in reproach and were persecuted 2. In the beginning of this Century God made some preparation for a Helps of knowledge Reformation of the Western Church and in the midst of it more which were two mighty helps of knowledge First some Greeks came into Italy to wit Emanuel Chrysoloras and Argyropulus two Byzantines Musurus Cretensis John Laicaris Theodor Gaza George Trapezuntius c. The Greek language had scarcely been heard in Italy the space of 700. years but then both Greek and Latine Schools were multiplied and they translated some Greek Fathers into Latine as Trapezuntius translated some works of ●yril Alexandrin of Eusebius c. Their Disciples were Leonard Aretin Guarin Veronen Pogius Florentin Philelphus c. In emulation of them were famous in the Latine language Laurentius Valla Flavius Blondus Donatus Acciaiolus a Florentine and many more And the year 1450. is famous First printing for the excellent invention of Printing in Strawsburg by a Gold-Smith John Gutenberg whom some do call Johannes Faustus This Art as it was wondrous for invention so it was and is singularly profitable for store of books then the Scriptures were seen and read the writings of the Fathers came to light Histories were made known times were compared truth was discerned falsehood was detected c. Before that time the rich-poor Monks gathered all the books into their Cloisters and few read them but others could not have them This was a great occasion of ignorance which thereafter was removed by use of Printing 3. Several Homilies and Treati●es came forth against the covetousness luxury and ignorance of the Clarks and Monks Herman Ried in a book De vita honestate Clericorum saith In these dangerous times are many Clarks whio make no account of the authority of the Fathers nor of reason they admit not the Holy Scriptures and they despise the ancient Canons as Bernard had written unto Eugenius they do hate and deride men of understanding and Catholicks because they espy the grievous vices of the Clergy and in zeal speak against their unfaithfulness the Clarks call such men fantastick disturbers of peace and men of erroneous consciences Who are zealous to root out the vices of the Clergy and who alledge the truth as it is written in the Canonical Scriptures these I say are checked and reviled by their own and other Prelates so that at last they must even against their wills be silent and dissemble So it is verified what St. Jerom said in lib. 1. de norma vivendi cap. 5. There is not so cruel a beast as a wicked Priest for he cannot indure to be corrected or hear the truth in a word they are full of wickedness Then he complains that the
be silent and then they all said Now he is dumb now by his silence he confesseth Iune 7. on which day the Sun was almost wholly eclipsed they assembled in the Cloister of the Minorites John Huss was also brought His Accusers read some Articles and undertook to prove them by Witnesses He protested that he had never spoken those things Then said the Cardinal of Florence Master you know that in the mouth of two or three Witnesses every judgement should be stable and here you shall see many famous Witnesses against you and for my part I cannot see how you can maintain your cause against them Huss answered I take God and my conscience to witness that I never taught such things as those men fear not to speak against me what they never heard of me The Cardinal said We cannot judge according to your conscience but must stay our selves upon evident Witnesses Then it was objected He defended the errors of Wickliff He answered He never defended any error of Wickliff When they instanced in some particulars he said These are not errors but agreeable to Scripture They objected He had sown sedition between the Ecclesiastical and Political States of Bohemia He answered Pope Gregory had taken the Empire from Wenceslaus and the Colledge of Cardinals being offended with the same Pope had written unto the King that if he would deny obedience unto the Pope they would bring it to pass that another Pope should be chosen who should restore him unto the Empire which he did and hence arose the division between the King and the Arch Bishop Sbinco a follower of Gregory and said he it is easie to be known that I am unjustly accused in that cause as the Germans here present can witness Albert Warren Arch Deacon of Prague stood up to speak but they would not hear him He was accused of some words in contempt of the Emperor and was cleared by testimony of the Lord de Chlum The Emperor then said to Huss Seeing we may not defend any man who is an Heretick or suspected of Heresie we advise thee to submit thy self unto the Councel in all things then we will provide that they shall suffer thee to go in peace with an easie pennance which if thou wilt refuse to do the Presidents will have sufficient cause to proceed against thee for our part be thou assured we will prepare the fire for thee with our own hands rather then suffer thee to maintain any opinions longer He answered O most Noble Emperor I render unto your Highness immortal thanks for your Letters of Safe-conduct and I take God to witness that I never intended to maintain any opinion obstinately and I came hither gladly that if the meanest of the Councel can lay before me any holier doctrine then mine I will change my minde Then he was led away by the Sergeants under the custody of the Bishop Rigen who had also Jerome of Prague in prison On the morrow they met again the former Articles were read in audience of Huss and others were said to be collected out of his Books of Predestination and Perseverance He answered acknowledging what they had truly gathered out of his Books and gave the reasons thereof he shewed that in some Articles they had perverted and wrested his words as may be seen in the cited History from sol 15. until 24. Then Peter de Aliaco Bishop of Cambrey said Thou hea●est how horrible crimes are laid against thee now it is thy part to think what to do thou must either recant all these Articles and so thou mayest finde favor or if thou wilt stand to the defense of them I fear it will be to thy danger this I speak to thee by way of counsel and not in manner of a Judge The like said other Cardinals He answered Most reverend Fathers I have said already that I came hither not to maintain any error obstinately but if in any particular I have conceived a perverse opinion I would gladly be reformed and now I beseech you that I may have liberty to declare my minde and if I bring not firm and sufficient reasons I will most humbly submit my self unto your information A Cardinal said Behold how craftily he speaketh he calleth it information and not correction or determination Verily said Huss term it as ye will I take God to witness that I speak from my heart After other speeches a Priest said He should not be admitted to recant for he hath written to his friends that although he swear with his tongue yet he will keep his minde without oath until death Then the Bishop Rigen commanded to carry him to prison He writ all those things being in prison unto his friends that the truth might be known and calumnies be prevented as he declareth in his Epistles When he was removed the Emperor said unto the Presidents that either he should recant all those things that were laid against him and abjure all preaching and be exiled out of Bohemia or else be punished with fire and all his favorets in Constance be apprehended and punished namely his Disciple Jerome Others said When the Master is daunted his Disciples will be more tractable Iuly 6. the Emperor sent unto him four Bishops with the two Bohemian Barons to know what he would do When he was brought out of prison John de Chlum said first Mr. John I am an unlearned man neither able to instruct you a man of learning nevertheless I require you if you know your self to be guilty of any of those errors that you would not be ashamed to change your minde but I will not advise you to do any thing against your conscience but rather to suffer any punishment then to deny what you know to be truth John said with tears Verily as I have often said I take the most high God to be witness that I am ready with all my heart if the Councel will instruct me by the holy Scriptures to change my minde Then said a Bishop I would never be so arrogant as to prefer my judgement unto the judgement of the whole Councel John answered Neither do I otherwise but if the meanest of the Councel will convince me of error I will perform with all my heart whatsoever the Councel will injoyn me Mark said another Bishop how he continueth in his errors So they commanded to put him into prison again The next day a general Congregation was in the great Church and the Emperor was present here was laid down all the vestiments belonging to a Priest John was brought and falling down on his knees he prayed a good space The Bishop Londensis went up into the Pulpit his Text was Rom. 6. Let the body of sin be destroyed all his Sermon aimed that John Huss should be destroyed Then a Bishop read the process against Huss at Rome and the Articles of his accusation When he attempted to answer a word or two unto the Articles severally the Cardinal of Cambrey commanded
Christ that one and the same work of Indulgence shall have vertue sometimes for six years sometimes for seven sometimes for seven hundred sometimes for seven thousand and sometimes full and absolute Then answering unto that position The Church is ruled by the Spirit of God he saith It is true in so far as the Church is holy but not in these particulars whereof she is ignorant and in which she erreth as alas we lament that she erreth grievously as appears by the unsavoury salt the delated Husband-man and the unfaithfull Steward whom Bernard expoundeth to be Mercenaries in place of Shepheards yea and Wolves for hirelings and Devils for Wolves In his Book De subditis superioribus he averreth That the Pope may err and when he erreth he should be resisted Pius the II. did usurp all the Kingdoms of the earth and Sixtus the IV. dispensed with all maner of oaths in causes temporal not only that were already made but that shall be made which is nothing else but to give unto men licence to forswear themselves and deceive others Because the Pope and his Cardinals are contrary unto Christ they are the Antichrist John Ostendorp a Canon of St. Levin in Daventry went once to visit him and Wesselus said unto him O diligent youth thou shalt live until that time when the doctrine of these late Divines and contentious School-men shall be forsaken Wesselus died in the year 1490. and Ostendorp lived until the year 1520. Gerhard Gelderhavrius writeth that he heard his Master Ostendorp report this Prophesie Ja. Triglandius in his Church History against ●tenboga par 3. writeth of him that when Pope Sixtus the IV. was chosen Wesselus went to visit him because he had been his good friend in Paris The Pope bade him ask what he would and it should not be denied unto him He answered I wish that since now you are universal Pope you would demean your self in your office according to your name that in due time you may hear that approbation Come thou good and faithful Servant enter into thy Master's joy The Pope said Why seekest thou not somewhat for thy self He said I crave no more but an Hebrew and Greek Bible out of the Vatican The Pope answered That you shall have but fool thou mightest have sought a Bishoprick or some such thing Wesselus answered Because I have not need of so great things When he died some Friers burnt all his books and papers but he had given sundry books unto others which were collected and printed at Wittemberg in the year 1522. When Luther saw them he spake of the Prophet Elias who thought that he was left alone and yet the Lord had preserved seven thousand that had hot bowed the knee to Baal so said he hath God preserved many thousands from the Idolatry of the Pope And he wrote of him as followeth There is one Wesselus come forth whom they call Basilius a Friselander of Groning a man of wonderful understanding and of an excellent spirit who hath been taught of God as Isaiah hath prophesied of Christians for it cannot be thought or said that he hath learned such things from men as neither I have If I had read those books before mine enemies might have said Luther hath taken all this out of Wesselus we do so agree But by these my joy and courage increaseth and I doubt not but I have learned the truth since he and I do agree in so constant unity and almost in the same words although differing in place and time and occasions And I admire by what mishap it is come that so Christian works were not published by another 37. Among the lights of that time Rodulph Agricola may justly be reckoned he was born in Friseland Ph. Melanchthon writing his life saith Josquin Groningensis had reported unto him that when he was young he heard Vesselus and Agricola often lamenting in their Sermons the darkness of the Church the abuses of the Mass the single life of Priests and that they both taught that men are not justified by works but by faith as Paul oft teacheth and they condemned the multitude of traditions He died An. 1489. Buxtorf Ind. 38. Paul Scriptor teaching on Scotus in Tubing when he came to the fourth Book Dist 10. did speak against transubstantiation and said All things should be tried by the Word of God as a true touch-stone all Scholastical teaching shall shortly be abolished and the doctrine of the primitive Church shall be restored according to the holy Scriptures Conradine Pelicanus was his Auditor and testifieth that he heard him reprove many errors and abuses of the Roman Church therefore the Minorites caused him to be banished and as Rud. Gualter in his Epistle before his Homiles on Matthew testifieth he was put to death as many did suspect being not moved with uncertain conjectures He died at Keiserberg in the year 1499. 39. Nicolaus Rus a Batchelor of Divinity preached at Rome and wrote The Pope hath not such power as is commonly believed the Pope should not be heard when he strayeth from the Scripture his Indulgences are but fraud those only are true pardons which God giveth of his free grace in Christ Saints should not be adored and far less their bones they who are called the Spiritualty to wit the Roman Clergy have packed up all Religion in mens traditions and vain superstitions and they are careless of their office and are Ministers of Antichrist These things are written in his Threefold Cord where he expoundeth the Lord's Prayer the Creed and the ten Commandments which he wrote in the Saxon Languauge that the common people might understand he left Rome and abode there and had many Auditors The Pastors of the Waldenses in Bohemia came and visited him At last he was forced to flee into Liveland where he died 40. Jerome Savonorola a Dominican in Florence taught these Articles 1. Men are justified freely by faith 2. The Communion should be administred in both kindes 3. The Pope's Indulgences are frivolous 4. The keys were given unto the Church and not to Peter alone 5. The Pope hath not from Christ any primacy above other Bishops 6. The Pope followeth neither the life nor doctrine of Christ and therefore he is the Antichrist 7. He who feareth the Pope's excommunication is excommunicated of God 8. He preached against the vices of the Clergy Io. Fox in Act. Mon. Philip Cominaeus did confer with him and testifieth that he was a man of most upright life He foretold that God would raise up a King to punish the Tyrants of Italy and that God would shortly reform the Church therefore some did h●te him and some believed him namely the Senate of Florence was perswaded by his preaching to give way unto Charls the VIII King of France When the league was made in Italy against the French he foretold that Charls should return in safety of his person maugre all the power of his adversaries Charls returning from Naples sent for
the Danube near unto Frioli in Italy and on the North he marcheth with Poland and Muscovy In Affrick his ditions are for the most part barren except most fertile Aegypt This Empire is now governed by twenty Bassaws of which three are in Europe the most potent is in Greece another in Hungary and the third in Temisnara in Asia are thirteen three in Affri●k and one in Cyprus Cumin Ventura in Relatio de Vrbe Constantinop Wheresoever they prevailed they either slue all the inhabitants or led them away in such misery that they lived so that death had been more tolerable Bathol Georgueviz lived amongst them the space of 13. years about the year 1540. and returning writ a book Deploratio Christianorum which was printed at Wittemberg An. 1560. there he saith If any man had foreknown that calamity they would rather have chosen to have died a thousand times if in any place death be mixed with life or if life be prolonged that men may be long a dying it is under the Turks the bondage in Aegypt the captivity in Assyria and exile in Babylon are light in comparison of this most grievous oppression for whether Christians do submit unto them or not it is all one if these prevail as in their promises is no fidelity so is no mercy in their victory they kill all the Nobility and scarcely spare any of the Clergy they throw down all the Churches or turn them to their blasphemous superstition leaving unto Christians old Chappels which when they decay it is permitted to rebuild for a great sum of money neither are Christians permitted to have any audible sign of assembling but only as it were by stealth to exercize their religion neither may a Christian bear Office in any Province or City nor carry a weapon if any blasphemy be spoken against Christ or contumely against a Christian he must hold his peace but if thou speak against their Mahumet the punishment is fire or if against their religion thou shalt be circumcized If a Christian on horseback do meet a Turkish Priest he must come down and with low courtesie salute the Priest Every Christian now must pay the fourth part of all his increase as well of their Corns and Bestial as of their handy-work and every Master of a family paieth a ducate yearly for every person of his family if the Parents have it not to pay they must sell their children and others are compelled to beg it or they are condemned to perpetual prison and still it is free unto the Turk to take the most handsom of the Christian children and circumcize and bring them in their Cloisters to be Seminaries of his Janizaries or guard and of his Souldiers so that they hear not of Christ nor Parents yet many of these Janizaries carry under their arm pits a New-Testament in Greek or Arabick From amongst the fairest of the Christian daughters the great Turks hath his Wives and Concubines and it is religion unto them to do otherwise So that by custom or contempt of the old Turkish blood the present Emperours and Janizaries and Bassaws are descended of the Christians Both the Christians and the Janizaries in these Provinces do heartily wish the revenging Sword of Christians to deliver them from their wofull thraldom and the Turks stand in fear of it because of such a prophesie amongst them Georgieviz de affectione Christianor The multitude of the Turks are base minded being destitute of all learning for their Laws forbid Schools and they live most by Pasturage Euphorm in Icon. animor cap. 9. This brief glance of the power and tyranny of the Turks is usefull for understanding some passages of the Scriptures as also to move others unto compassion and praiers for the Christians whose troubles we know not and to make us the more thankfull for our tranquility and liberty and more patiently to bear sickness a little penury or if it were banishment for Christ's sake c. which light things many do impatiently undergo because they know not the heavy crosses of other Christians Yea and for cleering the justice of God in all these heavy burthens of Christians it may be marked out of Nicep Gregoras and Chalcocondylas their Histories that though these Greeks were very constant both in the Doctrine and Rites of their Antients yet amongst their Nobility were manifold divisions and strifes amongst their Clergy great ambition and contention and especially they complain of the wretchlessness of the Emperours and the infinite Taxes which they exacted of the people so that many did even before the loss of Constantinople chuse to live under the Turks and the rather because at that time the Turks dealt fairly with the Christians that would come and dwell in their Towns and proffered them liberties and it was upon occasion of these grievances that some Greeks came into Italy and Germany in the beginning of that Century CHAP. IV. Of BRITAIN 1. WHilest King Richard was living in prison Henry the IV. was Crowned King of England An. 2. chap. 3. he ordained that if any person should obtain from the Bishop of Rome any provision to be exempt from obedience regular or ordinary or to have any Office perpetual in any house of Religion he should incur the pains of Praemunire And chap. 15. He gave authority unto Bishops and their Ordinaries to imprison and fine Civil power of coaction g●ven to Bishops who exerce it cruelly all Subjects who refuse the Oath ex Officio Here by the way I add that in the Parliament of King James An. 1610. Stat. 1. it is said Whereas the Temporal Sword was never in the Prelates power untill the 2. of Henry the IV. and then usurped by them without consent of the Commons for say They were truly Ecclesiastical yet it is against the Laws of God and of the Land that they should meddle with civil jurisdiction therefore is an Act past against it and the Oath Ex Officio In the same Parliament of Henry the IV. it was ordained that all Lollards that is who professed the doctriue which Wickliff had taught should be apprehended and if they should remain obstinate they should be delivered to the Bishop of the Diocy and by him unto the correction of the Secular Magistrate to be burnt This Act was the first in this Island for burning in case of Religion and began to be put in execution the same year 1401. and Thomas Arundel Arch Bishop of Canterbury swore that he would not leave a slip of the Lollards in the Land At that time did suffer William Sawtree a Priest William Swinderby Richard White William Thorp Reinold Peacock once Bishop of Saint A●●ph and then of Chicester Io. Fox in Acts Mon. Many errours were imputed unto them maliciously but as Ph. Morn in Myster pag. 495. shews ex Walsing in Hypodeig they held no other doctrine but of the Waldenses George Abbot contra Hill in answer to the first reason sec 25. shews that
After publick invocation of Gods name he joined with the enemy at Azotus and put him to flight then within Persia he overthrew his two Armies in two other fights he defaced the Image of the Fire and Sun which the Persians worshipped Zonar Annal. In the mean time Cosroes neglecting his eldest son Siroes designed his second son Mardases to the Crown Wherefore Siroes killed his father and his brother and he agreed with Heraclius they both restored captives Heraclius received Syria and Jerusalem and as they say the Cross where on Christ was crucified which Cosroes had taken out of Jerusalem So after seven years Heraclius returns with glory to Constantinople holding the Cross in his hand and gave thanks unto Christ In remembrance of this Victory he appointed the Feast of the Roode day Cario chron The Roode-Feast day The Sarazens had served him in these Wars and when they required their wages the Emperours Treasurers answered them disdainfully as follows in c. 3. This prosperity turns the Emperours mind to the worse he marrieth Prosperity puffe●h up his brothers daughter Martina and became a Monothelite by the suggestion of the Patriarch of the Jacobites and Sergius Patriarch of Constantinople Sophronius Bishop of Jerusalem admonished him of his errour But he made an Edict that displeased both parties that no man should speak of one will or of two wills of Christ Zonar Annal. After this the Sarazens gathered The Empire decayeth in Arabia and many Persians followed Mahumet because of the dissoluteness of his religion whereof hereafter Mahumet occupies all Arabia and passeth into Persia where because the King was dead the whole country almost became his Subjects and imbrace his religion they were little more called Persians but Sarazens or Mahumetans Heraclius went against them and loseth in one Battel 150000. men Pe. Mexia Others also rebelled against him in the West so that ere he died the Empire was sore weakned Rotharius became King of Lombardy the Slavons possesse Illyricum the Huns and Bavarians keep Hungary Bavier and Austria the Goths were reigning in Spain and unto the Empire belonged the Provinces of Greece a part of Italy and the Isles of the Mediterrane Sea from Sardinia unto Cyprus Asia the less a small part of Affrick and some other small Provinces Pe. Mexia After Heraclius had tried both fortunes he died of hydropsie an 639. 3. CONSTANTINE III. reigned not above four months after the Hid murther death of his father he was poisoned by his step-mother Martina with advice of Pirrhus the Patriarch that her son Heracleonas begotten in incest might be Emperour He was hated by Martina for his Throne and by Pirrhus for forsaking the heresie of his father Zonar 4. HERACLEONAS was but eleven years old and his Mother governed the Empire but with no contentment of the Subjects In the second year of his Reign the Senators rose against Martina and her son they cut off Is revenged his Nose and her Tongue that thereafter she should not move sedition among the people by her flattering words and sent them both into Cappadocia where they died in Prison Pirrhus was drawn back from his flight and imprisoned So Murther and Incest was punished 5. CONSTANS the son of Constantine was crowned by the Senate without the advice of the Souldiers which was a rare thing in these daies He was a Monothelite as the Patriarch Paul and both his Predecessor An Heretick is a Persecuter and restored Successor Pirrhus and therefore he punished sundry persons for speaking against his Heresie among whom Theodore Bishop of Rome narrowly escaped and his Successor Martine was taken by Theodore Eparch of Ravenna and carried in bonds to Constantinople and banished to Chersonesus where he died He also slue his own brother Theodosius and most cruelly vexed them all who would not subscribe his Typus or Heretical confession Therefore the Lord permits the power of the Sarazens to wax And hath no peace greater that in the 13. year of his Reign they sent a Navy from Phoenicia and spoiled the Coast of Asia without resistance yet intestine Wars falling amongst them for choosing their Captain Constans had two years peace And then he hears of a Rebellion among the Lombards and thinking to subdue them he comes into Italy with a great Army making a great shew and some expectation but he received loss and shame Thereafter he went to Rome and was received by the Citizens and Pope Vitalian Within few daies he spoiled the City and carried all the Ornaments and Treasure into Siracuse where because he was hated at Constantinople he kept Court six years and at last was slain in a Bath of too-hot water by Andrew one of his own servants in the 27. year of his Reign Platina calleth him Constantius 6. CONSTANTINE by surname Pogonatus or beardy was received into the Throne with his Father ere he went into Italy and now the Souldiers in Sicily did salute Mizisus or Mizentius with the honour of Emperour but he was soon taken and his head with the Authors of the Treason was carried to Constantinople Constantine began his Government with the murther One beginneth wickedly and proveth vertuous of his brethren because the Nobility would have had them partners of the Empire yet afterwards he proved valorous and good In his time the Sarazens were strong they entred into Sicily and carried to Alexandria in Aegypt all the spoil that Constans had taken out of Rome They invade Thracia were repulsed seven sundry Sommers at Constantinople and in the end were so foiled that their Captain Muthavia sought peace and accepted hard conditions to wit they should pay yearly unto the Emperour in name of Tribute 3000. pounds of gold 50. servants and as many good horses They of the West hearing of so honourable peace sent their Orators with gifts to congratulate the Victory Then the Emperour had peace every where and set his heart to take away the schism of the Monothelites for he thought if Christ have but one will he hath but one nature or else the other nature is not reasonable Against this Heresie he calleth the sixth General Councel which he held and ruled at Constantinople He keeps peace with the Bishops of Rome he was a long time sick and died an 607. ●n the time of his sickness the Sarazens possessed all Affrick unto Carthage and the Bulgarians came into Mysia 7. JUSTINIAN II. succeeds to his father in the 16. year of his age In the beginning his Captains forceth the Sarazens to restore all that they had taken in his fathers time and to sue for peace which was concluded for ten years Pe. Mexia But the Emperour being more hardy then faithfull made Perjury prospereth not new Wars against the Sarazens in Syria and was so streighted that he sought peace with shame Io. Lampad in Mellif Then was peace in all the World A young King and ill Minions but this young Emperour is miscarried by
ad an 687. Bellarmin de Ro. Pont. lib. 3. saith in the year 669. The Bishop of Rome began to have the Temporal sword that is temporal government for Aripert King of the Lombards gave unto the Bishop of Rome Alpes Coctiae The first temporal land of the Pope by Genua and an 714. Luithprand did confirm the same gift as is written by Ado. Vien and Blondus dec 1. cap. 10. whereupon Theod. Bibliander marketh saith Bellarm. that the first Papal Province was in the year 714. if that were true which they talk of that forged Donation of the Emperour Constantine where was it all this time upon that passage of Bellarmine Andrew Melvin Master of the University of St. Andrews about the year 1605. writes thus If from the number 699. wherein the Temporal Sword was first given to the Pope you will take off the number of years from Christ's The number 666. birth till his death there remains the number of the Beast In the time of Sergius Pipin Duke of Austria came to have place in the Court of France Sergius sate 13. years and 8. months and died an 701. CHAP. III. Of Divers Countries 1. THe Heresies of former ages and now the arrogant presumption of The Christian Church is divided into ten parts Prelates causeth the Church of Christ to be divided into ten parts differing all one from another either in articles of faith or discipline and rites whereof they have been too zealous each part calling themselves the only true Church of Christ most pitifull These parts are 1. The Latines or Western Churches which hath been under the Bishop of Rome 2. The Greeks and with them the Iberi Slavoni Russi Muscovites and others scattered through Europe together with the Patriarchal Seas of Antioch and Jerusalem in Asia and the Patriarchal See of Alexandria in Aegypt all which were brought once under the Bishop of Constantinople My aim hath been principally to know the alterations of these two parts at what time and where the schism began and how it did wax and so have I followed as the matter and light of stories gives occasion It is remarkable that Pope Gregory the I. in lib. 7. Ep. 53. writes that all the four Patriarchs in the East did hold the same faith and doctrine with the Synod at Chalcedon and other General Councels before it nor did they ordain any Bishop who did not follow and maintain the same 3. The Ethiopians or Abyssines under Prester-John in Affrick they use to bathe or baptize themselves every year in rivers not that they think it necessary to salvation but they do it on the day of the Epiphany in remembrance of Christ's baptism for this the Romanists call them Anabaptists But we will in Century XIII hear Germanus Patriarch of Constantinople calling them Orthodox they are circumcized by an old custom rather than of religion for Herodotus in Euterpe testifieth that the Ethiopians and Aegyptians in his time and before were circumcized 4. The Jacobites are so named from Jacob Zanzal a Syrian and Eutithian Heretick who lived an 613. and more shortly they are called Coptites as Io. Scaliger de emend temp lib. 5. writes from a City in Aegypt where Dioclesian slue 144000. Martyres because they would not sacrifice to Idols this sort are dispersed in Aegypt Arabia and Chaldea they are also circumcized The Authour of the book called the Catholick Traditions first in French and then translated into English searches the differences of all Churches and except ceremonies or rites hath not marked great difference of the Abyssines and Jacobites from our Reformed Churches and in his Preface he saith they pretend to have their name Jacobites from Jacob the old Patriarch and the name Copthes or Cut because they are circumcized and in Qu. 5. he saith they call themselves Christians of the first conversion 5. The Nestorians are said to have abjured the heresie of Nestorians yet keep still the name for hatred and distinction of the Eutithians they dwell dispersed thorow Persia India and Tartary they use the Chaldean language in their Liturgy and their Prelate resideth in Mosal or Seleucia 6. Maronites dwell in Lybia and Phoenicia they use the Arabian tongue they are permitted to use Bells after the manner of the Western Church which is not granted to others in the East They are said to have been free from all enemies till this day not so much by strength or number of souldiers as by scituation of the mountains 7. The Armenians use only their own language but are infected with fond heresies they hold that Christ did not assume an human body of the Virgin Mary but had an incorruptible body from the moment of his conception and this body say they should be worshipped in the own nature of it and therefore they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or worshippers of a corruptible thing and because they worship the Cross of Christ they are called Cross worshippers For these causes they are contemned by the Greeks but Pope Lucius the II. accepted them because at that time they did acknowledge the Pope as head of the Church nevertheless the Romans hate them as Hereticks but deal discreetly with them as they say to draw them unto their obedience they call their Arch-Bishop the Catholick Bishop 8. The Georgians are so called from St. George whose badge they carry they dwell in Media Persia and about the Caspian sea they agree with the Greeks both in language rites and doctrine 9. Suriani are so named from Sur a City of Assyria and also are called Samaritani they have the same language which the Sarazens had and religion with the Greeks for the most part and they have leavened bread in the Sacrament 10. Mozarabes who dwelt first in Arabia and thence they went in Colonies into Affrick and then into Spain but none of them remain till this day because they would not contract with any of another Religion in their Service they were brought to use the Latine language and to acknowledge the primacy of the Pope but they would not change in sundry other articles These are the remnants of the most ancient and famous Churches the most part of which agree in many more things of great importance than those wherein they dissent so that amongst the blind Pagans and blasphemous Mahumetists the name of God is invocated by some Christians with more piety it may be supposed than among others where there is greater libertie and clearness of doctrine Wheresoever the Word of God is preached we must think some are effectually called for the rain coming from heaven returns not again but watereth the earth and makes it to bud so is the word of the Lord Isa 55. And Jesus Christ is the Universal Shepheard of them all The Authour of the fore-named Catholick Tradition in the Annotation on the 5. question saith There are two or three hundred years past since that it hath been very hard to judge by the multitude
also that in the end of that Synod the Britan Bishops confessed that it was the right way of justice and righteousness which Augustine taught But it is clear from Beda that the Britans did oppose all that he spoke and they who said so were at the first meeting when Augustine had not discovered himself Likewise out of the Interrogatories that Augustine sent unto Gregory the I. and are with the answers in the end of Gregory's works it is easie to be seen that the first Arch-Bishop of Canterbury was no learned Clark but very superstitious and especially in the eighth answer that he was ambitious in that he did aim to have the Bishop of France subject unto him After the death of Augustine Laurence who did come from Rome with him took his charge he did invite the Scots dwelling in the same Island unto a Synod and thought to have found them meliores saith Beda lib. 2. cap. 4. readier to his mind than the Britans were but he found no less opposition by them for the Scots differed nothing from the Britans Dagan and Columban did refuse all communion with him and would not lodge in the same Inn where any Romish Bishop was If we compare all these premises we may see the cause why our Writers have spoken so diversly of Augustine some calling the English conversion a perversion and i●ebriation and others terming it a gracious conversion to wit when they consider how Pagans by the light of the Gospel were brought unto the faith though tainted with some errours they do with the Angels of Heaven rejoice in remembrance of that English happiness but when they consider that the old Professours of the ancient faith were by the importunity and ambition of Augustine and his successours inthralled in multitude of new inventions and in an unjust subjection yea and that so many were martyred by means at least by suggestion of Augustine justly have they termed this work of Augustine a perversion of the faith so giving this twofold censure in the spirit of discretion and not of contradiction even as Christ knew and approved the works of Ephesus but he had some things against her 2. The difference in observing Easter was thus The Romans in remembrance Difference for Easter of Christ's resurrection did observe the first Sunday after the full Moon of March and the Eastern Church as also the Britans kept the fourteenth day of the Moon on whatever day of the week it fell For this matter was no small debate between the Greek and Latine Churches long before as also in Britain about the year 657. betwixt Finnan a Scot and Bishop of Lindsfarn and Ronan another Scot and coming lately from Rome Finnan was so reverenced by the Romish faction that nothing was altered in his daies and he writ a book Proveteri Paschatos ritu Beda hist lib. 3. cap. 25. This jar was renewed about the year 670. by Wilfrid Bishop of York who had been at Rome Colman a Scot and Successour of Finnan and Cedda who afterwards was Bishop of York defend the old custom alledging as is before that this Island had received their rites from Asia and had kept them from the beginning of their conversion untill this time Wilfrid and Agilbert a Bishop and Agatho a Priest and James a Deacon said Rome should be preferred above Asia because the bones of Peter were at Rome Colman answereth that Anatolius and Eusebius Pamphili do evidently declare what were the rites of Asia and the same were received from John the Evangelist and were followed by Columba whom they could not deny to have been a good and devote man Wilfrid replieth The authority of Peter is greater for Christ said to him Thou art Peter and to thee will I give the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven Then another question was propounded concerning the shaving of the Clergy mens heads which the Scots did refuse But Beda hath not recorded the dispute In the end King Oswin said Seeing these rites were received by Saint Peter and now he is Porter of Heaven I will follow him lest he thrust me back when I come thither Beda loc cit When Colman saw that the authority of a rude Prince did oversway he would stay no longer but excluded his Bishoprick with Eata Abbot of Meilrose and thereafter he carried a Convent of Monks into one of the Isles Hebrides where they lived by the works of their hands Beda ibid. cap. 26. Wilfrid after that contest was accused of pride and misdemeanours but refused to answer and fled Then Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury set another in his place thus the controversie for Easter was ended in England And to end it altogether after other contests about the year 716. Ecbert or Berect as some call him an English man did so prevail amongst the Scots that Easter was kept in the Isle Hu after the Romish manner the 24. of April but he died suddainly The suddainness of his death Beda lib. 5. cap. 23. calleth a confirmation of his doctrine He might as well have said The Lord did approve the fact of Lot's wife 3. About the year 600. Brude King of Peichts though a Christian had The Conversion of the Saxons in Britain conjunct Wars with Ethelfrid King of Northumberland against Aidan King of Scots and Malgo a Duke of the Britans The Scots did prevail with great loss The report is saith Buchan hist Scot. lib. 5. that Columba Boetius calleth him Colm Abbot of the Monastery in Colmkill or Jona did assure his fellows of the victory the same hour of the fight After some years Ethelfrid renewing his forces came against the Scots Aidan waited for the Britans in vain and was put to flight with great slaughter on both sides After that fight Columba died for grief and Aidan was so commoved for the unlucky success and for the want of good Columba and for fear of the apparent danger of Christians from that cruel Pagan that within few weeks he died Not long after Ethelfrid was killed by the Britans as is said before Edwin succeedeth him and thereafter was setled in the general government of the Saxons Then the friends of Ethelfrid amongst whom were his seven sons and one daughter fearing cruelty fled into Scotland King Eugenius the 4. son of Aidan not regarding the hostility of their fathers accepted them and caused them to be instructed in the Christian faith Edwin was slain in Battel an 633. by Penda King of Mercia and Kedwalla King of the Britans there was never a more cruel Battel in this Island for Penda pursued the new converted Christians and Kedwalla would destroy the Saxons wherefore their rage did spare neither age nor sex Buchan hist Then Northumberland was divided into two Kingdomes Osrich cousin german of King Edwin was King of Deira and Eanfrid or Andefrid the eldest son of Ethelfrid was King of Bervici or North part they were both Christians the one instructed by Paulin Bishop of York and the other
Possevinus but also our Zeth Celvisius into this Historical errour whereas neither was Gotteschalk a Scot nor of one accord with this John Scot as we have cleared before 9. At Macra within the Diocy of Rhemes was a Synod An. 881. There they distinguish between the power Civil and Ecclesiastical and shew that only Christ Jesus was both King and Priest after the Incarnation and as the one hath need of the other so neither should a King assume Priestly power nor a Priest meddle with secular affairs or usurp Royal power but they ●ome not to shew what power belongeth unto the Magistrate in Ecclesiastical affairs They do recite a Synodal Homily of Gregory the I wherein the ambition of Priests is taxed in these words Because we have slipped into external purposes partly through barbarous clamours and partly through negligence of our time and we have left the ministry of Preaching and to our punishment are called Bishops who keep the name of honour and not the vertue thereof for they which have been committed unto us do forsake the Lord and we are silent when they are weltring in their wicked works nor do we reach the hand of correction they perish daily with much wickedness and we are careless when we see them going into Hell But how can we amend the lives of others since we have little thought of our own for we are so bent upon Secular cares that we are unsensible of what is within because we do affect so much other things without us for with the use of earthly care our minds are hardned from heavenly desire and when with the very use we are hardned in the actions of Adam's world we cannot be softned unto those things which do concern the love of our Lord when we are taken up with extraneal actions we do forget the ministry of our own actions we forsake the cause of our Lord and do wait on earthly affairs we take on us the place of holiness and are drowned with earthly actions It is verily fulfilled in us what is written And there shall be like People like Priest For the Priest is no better then the People when we go not beyond them in the holiness of life Behold now is not any Secular action which is not administred by Priests We see with how heavy a sword the World is strucken and with what rods the people do daily perish whose fault is this but ours Behold Towns are wasted the Tents of the Church are overthrown Monasteries are thrown down the Fields lie wast and we are the Authours of the peoples death who should lead them into life for for our sin are the people beaten down because through our sloth they are not instructed unto life Let us take it to heart Who were ever converted by our teaching or being admonished by us were brought unto repentance Who hath left their luxury by our information Who hath forsaken pride or avarice Here we are called Shepheards but when we shall appear before the face of the eternal Shepheard can we bring thither any flock which hath been converted by our preaching But oh that we were able to preach and could hold forth the duty of our place in the innocency of our lives So far they 10. In the first half of this Century were many Synods in England and did treat little or nothing in doctrine or manners but only for jurisdiction and revenges of Bishops and Abbots as is evident in S. Hen. Spelman Concil About the year 887. was a Synod under King Alfred at least Laws both Ecclesiastical and Civil were published in his name He beginneth with the ten Commands and omits the second for filling up the number he saith The tenth Thou shalt not have Gods of silver or gold On this place Will. Lambard who did translate these Laws out of the Saxonish into Latine saith This omission of the second Command was not his fault nor of the first writer but of the first maker of the Laws for saith he since the second Councel at Nice such was the darkness of these times that for conciliating authority unto the Precepts of men they thought good to diminish the Precepts of God 11. At Triburia was a Synod of 22 German Bishops An. 895. at command of the Emperour Arnulph and the Decrees were made in his name In Ca. 1. He commandeth to apprehend all excommunicated persons and bring them unto him that they may be punished with man's judgment which will not fear the judgment of God and if any be so rebellious that they will not be taken and so happen to be killed they who kill them shall be free from all censures both Ecclesiastical and Civil Ca. 6. If any come presumptuously into a Church with a drawn sword he commits sacriledg and shal be punished as for sacriledge Ca. 11. If any of the Clergy although extreamly coacted shal commit murther whether a Priest or Deacon should be deposed for we read in the Canons of the Apostles That if a Bishop or Priest or Deacon be found guilty of fornication or perjury or theft he should be deposed how much more he who commits so great a crime for he who professeth to follow Christ should walk as he hath walked when he was reviled he reviled not again and when he was smitten he smote not again c. Ca. 13. Augustine the wonderfull Doctour seemeth to have spoken clearly of Tithes in few words Tithes are required as debt What if God would say Thou art mine O man the earth which thou tillest is mine the seed which thou scatterest is mine the beasts which thou weariest are mine the heat of the Sun is mine and since all is mine thou who appliest but thy hands deservest only the tenth part and yet I give thee nine parts give me the tenth if thou wilt not give me the tenth I will take away the nine if thou givest me the tenth I will multiply the nine unto thee If any man ask wherefore should Tithes be given let him know that therefore are they given that God being appeased with this devotion he would give us necessaries more aboundantly and that the Ministers of the Church being helped may be the more free for Spiritual Service ..... We do judge that there should be four portions of the Tithes and Oblations of Beleevers according to the Canons c. Ca. 40. It is not lawfull in Christian religion that a man should have her to wife whom he hath defiled in adultery Ca. 44. If any man hath committed fornication with a woman and his brother shall afterwards marry her the brother which first defiled her because he told not his brother ere he married her shall suffer a very hard pennance and correction and the woman according to the second Canon of the Neocoesarian Councel shall be put to death THE THIRD AGE Of the CHURCH OR The History of the Church Fading and of Anti-Christ Rising containing the space of 400. years from the Year of our
XIII the son of Albericus succeeded How old this father of fathers could be may be gathered by supputation of years when Hugh was expelled Albericus was but a boy and till this time were not passed 20 years neither was this Octavius or Pope John his fathers eldest son as Baronius hath marked and therefore he saith He who could not be a Deacon for age like a Stage-player acteth the Pope and nevertheless saith he consent made him Pope for it is a lesser evil to have a monstrous head then to be infamous with two heads And a little after he preferred this Pope above others which were chosen Canonically by the Clergy Let Platina tell what he was One saith he defiled from his infancy with all shame and filthiness given to hunting if he could spare any time from his luxury more then to prayer By the advice of the Senate he sent for Otho against Berengarius and when he was releeved he practised against his redeemer therefore as is before he was deposed and restored again by the Romans And immediately even in these same daies saith Platin. the most wicked man was judged to be strucken of God lest the Church had been wasted with a schism Some write saith he that this Monster was taken in the act of adultry and killed But he was intruded at that time by his father powerfully and delighting himself with another man's wife died suddenly without repentance Sigebert saith Sine viatico Fascic temp saith Behold O everliving God how unlike are they unto former Bishops O the depth of God's judgments who can search them out Let Bellarmin excuse him among the rest and pass him over in silence Platina saith he was worse then any Pope before him but he saith not and worse then any after him for worse Popes are coming Onuphrius on that place of Platina saith He first changed his name because he thought not his Christian name honourable enough but we have heard that others have done the like He sate 10 years 23. BENEDICT the V was chosen by the Romans although Leo the VIII who was advanced by the great Synod was yet alive wherefore Otho returned to Rome in wrath and restored Leo as is before 24. LEO the VIII sitting now peaceably did renounce in favour of the Emperour and his Successours all the Donations of Justinian of Charls the The Pope's resignation of former Donations Great of his son Lewis The words of the Bull in Crantz Saxon. lib. 4. cap. 10. are Leo Bishop the servant of God's servants unto Otto our spiritual son in Christ the Emperour Augustus and unto all his Successours Emperours and Kings of Italy Whatsoever the Lord Charls King of France and Lombardy and Patricius Romanus as also his father Pipin have given of the Royalty of this Kingdom of Italy unto blessed Peter the Apostle in the Church of Rome whether they were given by instruments by the Notary Etherius or whether they came by Oaths or Donations or any other way from Justinian Emperour or King Arithpert all these things we give and adjudge unto you Otto Emperour and to Alheida your wife and consort of the Empire and unto your consorts and successours of this Kingdom of Italy for ever being present the holy Evangelists and many Patronages of the Saints ....... that ye may have and possess all these things for ever for the uses of your Court the Military affairs and to fight against Pagans and Rebels of the Roman Empire and therefore by authority of this instrument we confirm and strengthen unto your posterity from generation to generation for ever and if any shall destroy this our authority and be found to violate it or do contrary unto it let him know that he shall fall under the wrath of blessed Peter Prince of the Apostles and our wrath and of all our Predecessours And moreover if he repent not of the evil let him be liable unto the Julian Law of Laese Majestatis c. After the solemn form fiat fiat this Bull was subscribed by all the Arch-Bishops Bishops Cardinals Priests and Deacons chief Officers of the Roman Church by the Consuls also Exconsuls Senatours and civil Lords and by all which by subscribing could give any confirmation The names fill up a page This Bull was kept at Florence for the use of the Emperour as Henry token a Canon of Magdeburg witnesseth in Catal. test ver lib. 11. Onuphrius proveth that this Leo was a lawfull Pope And whatsoever can be said against the Bull or Instrument Crantz li. cit cap. 11. saith It is more authentical and legal then that Decree of Constantine's Donation in longa Palea This Leo sate 2 years 25. JOHN the XIV was not chosen till Otho sent his Messengers unto the election as also this Pope did in other things reverence the Emperour and for this cause Peter Captain of the City two Consuls and the Elder men whom they call Decarchones and others rose against him they laid hands on him in the Lateran Church and kept him in Prison 11 moneths The Emperour made hast to Rome and put all the above-named persons in Prison till the cause was examined and then the Consuls were exiled into Germany the Elder men were hanged and Peter was given unto the pleasure of the Pope who caused him to be stript naked to shave his beard and hang him by the hair a whole day and set him upon an Ass with his hands under her tail then so to be led through the City in the mean time being scourged with rods and lastly banished out of the City After this manner did this Ghostly Father obey the Gospel Love your enemies saith Platina This Pope did first baptize Bells he called the great Bell in Lateran John He sate 7 years 26. BENEDICT the VI succeeded in place and miseries he was taken by Cintius Captain of the City and cast into the Prison of malefactors where he was strangled or as others say famished in the 18. moneth But I fear saith Platina that the reward of Benedict was according to his merits since none hath written that his death was revenged and Otho is accounted a very good man and a most ready defender of the Roman Church 27. DONUS the II sate one year without doing any thing worthy of record 28. BONIFACE the VII came to the Papacy by unlawfull means Platin When he saw that the Citizens conspired against him he hid himself and seeing no appearance of tranquility he stole all the Ornaments of Saint Peter's Church and fled into Constantinople Then 29. BENEDICT the VII was set up by the Romans Otho was offended that they had transgressed the Acts made in his fathers time he hastned to Rome and exerced severity against the rebellious Romans they in suffering deserved death did take unto themselves the name of Martyrs But Fasc temp maketh a distinction they were killed as some in the primitive Church were killed alike punishment but not alike cause Benedict
had made the death of Christ unprofitable unto themselves which certainly is horrible to be spoken and very lamentable seeing that death brought salvation unto many This was the mind of Basilius also and nevertheless we find in the Gospel That he might give his life a ransom for many to be expounded for all Cap. 10. Can never with these sacrifices which were offered year by year ..... If they being once offered had been available they should no more have been offered but when the oblation was made year by year and often it is clear that they were too weak for bringing salvation unto them who were desirous of it and therefore after the first offering followed another and again and again another for amongst Drugs that are called most valid and efficacious which being but once applied or drunken doth heal and cure but what must be often changed and applied hath the less vertue of healing and doth no good unto the sick But one may ask Do we not offer without blood Yea indeed but then we remember the death of Christ and we have but one oblation and not many seeing He is offered but once for we offer him continually or rather we remember his oblation even as if at this time He were sacrificed wherefore it is certain that we have but one sacrifice and the Law had many although as it is said before it was offered the oftner that it might be the more profitable unto many which nevertheless is far otherwise But our sacrifice as I have said is but one and once offered and continueth whole both in this life and that to come and it is more perfect for it is but one blood and once poured forth and one body although it was offered for many and it is not many as it is but one sacrifice which is offered for we do offer that continually as if it were present So far from Theophylact. But here some may object that Theophylact agreeth not with the Reformed Church in Theoph●lact is vindicated many particulars It is true and therefore I say often we must make separation of the dross from the pure gold but his difference is supposed to be greater then it is Porsena in his Epistle unto the Reader before the Gospels saith Theophylact follows Chrysostom concerning free-will and faith and some other things and therefore in expounding some places he is somewhat more violent which I say that herein you should use discretion which knowest thy self to be addicted unto the Canonical Scriptures only and not to scar thee from reading of him as some are wont when any passage displeaseth they throw the book away So say I in reading of any book written by man we who are addicted to the holy Scriptures only must use discretion But it seemeth Porsena speaks not this unto Papists because they are not addicted to the holy Canonical Scriptures only and he saith that Theophylact is more violent in expounding some places where certainly Porsena understands that he crosseth the Tenets of the Romish Church But this may be more clear by particulars 1. Porsena hath often marked the margine with liberum arbitrium as if Theophylact did in point of free will there assert the Romish errour concerning free-will and I know that others do alledge his testimony against the doctrine of the Reformed Church howbeit he speak nothing against us nor for them as is clear by inspection of particular places On Luk. 15. fol. 103. on the margine is Liberum arbitrium and in the line is The substance of man is rational whereupon followeth free-will for all rational creatures have a free-will and the Lord hath given them reason that they may use it freely c. It is clear that Theophylact speaks there of the nature of man absolutely or without any relation to any particular condition of man before the fall or after the fall and he speaketh against the Stoicks and Manicheans which did hold that the actions of men were carried by fate or pressing necessity and therefore it follows there If God would have us to be compelled he had not made us rational and of a free-will On Ioh. 6. at the words Will ye also go away he saith The Lord saith not Go ye away for this had been to repel them but he asketh will ye go away whereby he makes it free whether they will follow him or not and he sheweth that he will not have them to follow him in fear On these words also hath Porsena fixed Liberum arbitrium As also on Mat. 16. at the words If any will follow me he saith to the same purpose The Lord saith If any will to shew free-will and not coacted vertue These and many more places are clearly spoken against the necessity of fate or coaction which now is not controverted But if you ask By what power is an unregenerated man converted he hath said it already on 2 Cor. 4. and Eph. 1 and 2. Or if you ask By what power doth a regenerate man continue in the faith and practise of godliness Theophylact teacheth that on Phil. 2. at the words For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do Whereas he had said with fear and trembling now he saith that they need not fear for I have not spoken so that ye should despair but be the more wary for if ye take heed and be diligent God will make all perfect for it is he which makes you prompt to such a good will that we will good things and also bringeth such promptitudes of our mind unto an end for God worketh in us both the will that is he inableth you that ye desire good things and he will augment this good will and kindle it that it may be the more fervent ..... the Apostle takes not away free-will but willeth that we should alwaies give thanks unto God and committed all unto him Mark saith Theophylact but this manner of speaking he saith in you who work your salvation with fear and trembling for in such men which are willingly led unto good God worketh all things According to good will that is that it may be fullfilled in you what is acceptable unto God ..... for God will inable us to live rightly although it were no other cause but only this because so he willeth 2. It is objected that Theophylact and election by foreseen faith or works saith that election was made upon the fore-sight of faith and good works as on Eph. 1. it is When he saith He hath chosen he pointeth forth both the mercy of God and their vertue to wit whom God had separated as who were to be good I answer In these words Theophylact toucheth not the moving cause of election but only teacheth that God had chosen none but such as were to be good and godly and this he insists oft upon against them which held that faith or profession of faith is sufficient to salvation although men do not
Princes and they will sit as Monarchs now they give Laws concerning Civil things they do raise seditions and depose Princes now they lead Armies and impose Taxes now they have no care of religion unless some witness of the Truth dare open his mouth against the waxing errours or unless some ceremonies serve for advancing the Papal grandure or seem expedient to draw money unto their See as will be manifest especially after the year 1070. 2. HENRY the II. Duke of Bavier and Nephew of Otho the I. was chosen Bishops are States-men Emperour by the Princes Electours according to their new authority An. 1002. This was the first time that Bishops had a voice in the election of the Emperour and hence it came that they sit in the Imperial Diet and in some other Nations Bishops are Parliamentary Lords Henry was so distracted with wars against Robert King of France and then against Bodislaus King of Bohemia for the space of 10. years that he could not go to Rome After his Coronation there he conquered Calabria and Pulia unto the Empire from the Calisti that is the Deputies of the Greek Empire Shortly thereafter the Normans entred into Pulia and were partners with the Greeks against the Germans and thereafter became Lords of both Sicilies Henry gave his sister in marriage unto Stephen King of Hungary on condition that he would be a Christian He held a Synod at Frankford of which Dithmar lib. 6. and after him Ph. Mornay in Myster say A general Synod is assembled at Frankford and visited by all the Bishops on this side of the Alps Willegisus was Moderator and no word of the Pope In the year 1024. Henry fell sick and intreated the Electours that they would chuse Conrade Duke of Suevia or Franconia to be his Successour The two brothers Basilius and Constantine had now reigned 50. years together but Basilius was the worthier and had the greatest sway and died three years before Constantine who then did reign vitiously and before his death he ordained his son-in-law Romanus Argyropolus to be his Successour 3. CONRADE the II. was pronepnoy of Conrade the I. He was called Emperour and was not chosen for two years thereafter because of discord among the Electours and then were sundry Competitours as Conon Uncle of the late Henry And many did claim liberty upon occasion of the interreign He calmed all these troubles by his prudence and without blood-shed He went into Italy with a great Army and subdued Millain and at Rome was Crowned by Pope John the XXI with great applause of the people When he returned into Germany he was necessitated to go back into Italy because several Cities did revolt he inflicted severe punishments on the offenders and arriving at Rome he releeved Pope Benedict as followeth Then he did visit all the Lands of Italy belonging unto the Empire or Church without resistance and returned with Triumph into Germany where he thought to live in Peace but within few daies he died An. 1040. Romanus proved a most valiant Prince at first but following the waies of covetousness he was hated in the sixth year of his Reign his wife Zoë procured his death that she might marry Michael Calaphatus he ruled the Empire 7. years and defended it valiantly against the Sarazens in Asia in Syria and on the frontiers of Phoenicia After him Zoë married a fourth husband Constantine Monomachus he was a vitious man and the Sarazens prevailed in Asia the less After him and the death of Zoë her sister Theodora reigned two years so happily that great lamentation was for her death After her within three years were three Emperours to wit Theodora had named an old man Michael Stratiotes Isaac Comnenus rebelled against him and the people receive him but he was taken away by death and when he was sick he named Constantine Duca 4. HENRY the III. called The Black was chosen Successour to his father not without difficulty for the Pope and some Electors did alledge it is dangerous if the son did succeed unto his father but they yeeld for his valour He purchased great honour in subduing the King of Bohemia the Duke of Lorain and in restoring Peter King of Hungary against an usurper Andrew In his time were many Popes of no authority and their lands were taken by others without resistance Henry had wars with Henry King of France to him the Emperour presented to decide the controversie hand to hand that no more innocent blood might be spilt at a parley they do agree In the end of his Reign God sent on the earth for the sins of men famine sword and pestilence The Emperour through heaviness contracts sickness and caused the Electours to swear unto his son not yet baptized as King of the Romans and he died An. 1057. In Greece Constantine was so hated for covetousness that the Subjects would not make resistance against the Infidels conquering many Towns in Asia he died in his 7. year His sons were young and the Empress Eudocia took upon her the government Because the Infidels prevailed the Princes caused her to take Romanus Diogenes for her husband he proclaimed himself Emperour and went against the Sarazens and after divers chances was taken An. 1072. Axan the Sultan laid him at the foot of his Throne and stepped up and down upon his body and thereafter sent him home with promises of mutual alliance between their children The Greeks judge him unworthy of the Empire and Crowned Michael son of Duca He picked out the eys of Diogenes and made him a Monk The Turks still do prevail in the Eastern parts of the Empire therefore Michael was deposed in the 7. year and Nicephorus an old man was chosen Alexius Comnenus Michael's brother thrust him forth and reigned 27. years 5. HENRY the IV. was chosen successour to his father because he was so young and there was peace in the Empire the government was committed unto his mother Agnes by consent But the Princes began to be weary of a How to deal with the Popes womans government and would have him to take the power into his own hand while he was but young and then all was done as the Princes would but when he came to riper years he ranversed many of their deeds Vita Henr. in fascic rer On the other side they were offended and began rebellious attempts so that he was forced to take up Arms and especially against the Saxons He was neither unlearned nor peevish yet had so bad luck that whosoever took up Arms against him was thought to do religiously Guil. Malmsb. de gest Angl. lib. 3. He was given to venery but otherwise was wife religious eloquent liberal to the poor and would not willingly be subject unto any power He had continual jars and wars with the Popes through the wicked pride of Hildebrand By the way Princes may learn how to deal with the Popes he that stands in aw of their curse shall be a slave to their
just and I suffer for the sins of my youth but ye are not guiltless and because ye do contrary unto your Oath ye shall not escape the hand of the just avenger and your portion shall be with him who betraied his Master They stopped their ears and departed with the Royal Ornaments Alb. Crantz in Saxon. lib. 5. cap. 20. saith Some report these circumstances another way Thereafter they sent him as Prisoner to Ingelheim where he was advertised that they were talking of cutting off his head wherefore he made an escape and went to Leodium as appears in Epist Henrici Regi Celtar in Fascic rer expet There he was entertained honourably by the Bishop and therefore the Bishop Otbert with all his Church was excommunicated by Pope Paschalis who writ also unto Robert Earl of Flanders to pursue Henry with all his followers assuring him that he could not offer better sacrifice unto God Epist Paschalis tom 2. Concil Edit Colon. An. 1551. Otbert was not silent and in the name of the Church of Leodium published an Apology wherein he saith It were Apostolical to follow the Apostle as it were Prophetical to follow a Prophet but as our sins deserve the Apostolical who should pray for the King howbeit a sinner that we may live a quiet and Apostolical life under him is so contentious that he will not suffer us to live in peace Seeing the words both of the Apostle and Prophet do so sound I the daughter do humbly ask my mother the holy Church of Rome Whence comes this authority unto him who is called Apostolical that besides the sword of the spirit he useth another sword of blood against her Subjects Then he shews how far this Pope hath departed from the steps of Gregory the I. both in life and doctrine This Apology is loc cit Also the Emperour writ unto his son unto the Bishops Dukes and other Potentates of the Empire that they would cease from pursuing him and his friends against all equity and piety and at several times he appealed unto the Pope as is evident by his Letters in Fascic rer expetend But Apologies Supplications and Appeals had no place so that in the end the old Emperour was brought to the necessity of begging a prebendary from the Bishop of Spira although he had preferred the Bishop unto that See and had erected a glorious Monastery of the blessed Virgin there he could not obtain so much So he returned privately unto Leodium and died his body lay unburied in an old deserted Chappel five years and then was buried at Spira He had fought 62 battels and was never foiled he died An. 1107. Alb. Crantz writes much to excuse the Son and the Popes and bitterly against the Father yet he hath no particular fault against him but as he speaks simony and contumacy Of the Eastern Emperours it follows in Henry the V. CHAP. II. Of POPES 1. SYLVESTER the II. before called Gerebert had been a Monk in A Pope covenanteth with the Divel Orleance and made a contract with the Divel to advance him unto the Papacy Thence he went to Hispala in Spain where becoming a Doctour he had amongst his hearers Otho the III. Robert King of France Lotharius a man of noble birth afterwards Bishop of Senon and others Robert gave him the Bishoprick of Rhemes the Emperour advanced him to Ravenna lastly by great ambition and aid of the Divel he attained the Papacy saith Platina and others The Emperour for favour of his Master gave unto Saint Peter eight Counties Pisa Senogallia Favum Aucona Fossabrum c. Vsser de stat Eccles cap. 3. ex Gerber Epi. 158. Benno Cardinal of Ostia saith When the 1000. years were expired Gerebert coming out of the bottomless pit of God's perdition sate 4. years and as by the responses of Satan he had deceived many so by the same responses he was deceived and in the just judgment of God he was taken away by suddain death What he saith briefly Platina declares more fully thus Once Sylvester asked the Divel how long time he might injoy the Papacy The answer was ambiguous If thou go not to Jerusalem thou shalt never die After four years and one month he was saying Mass in Lent in a corner of the Rood-Church that was called Ierusalem within Rome and he asked how that Chappel was called They said Ierusalem Then he knew the time was come when he must die wherefore he became sad and confessed his sin before the people and exhorted them to beware of ambition and craft of the Divel and to live holily Then he commanded them to cut his body into pieces and lay it on a cart and to bury it wheresoever the horses of their own accord would draw it The report is saith Platin. that by the Providence of God whereby sinners may learn the hope of forgiveness if they repent in their life the horse stood at Lateran and there he was buried whereas yet saith he by the ratling of his bones and moistness of his tomb is portended the death of the Pope It were a shame to relate these things if they were not the words of their own Writers Platina saith he had it from Mar. Polon Vincentius Belluacensis Laurent Schrader in Monimen Italiae lib. 2. and Galfrid And the same is written by Pol. Vergil de invent rer lib. 5. cap. 8. but he speaks not of the Presage Naucler had all in generat 34. Onuphrius would purge him of this blot and alledgeth that the knowledge of the Mathematicks in these rude daies was taken for Magick But the words of the now-named Authours are more clear it is certain say they that he attained to the most secret things of all Sciences and especially of the Mathematicks but as quick wits can scarcely hold themselves within bounds he entred into Necromancy and it is so thought by many Authours not without great infamy by which Necromancy he made way unto the Papacy He was the first Pope who caused to beat the drum unto the Wars in the holy land as they spoke and published an Epistle with this inscription Wasted Jerusalem unto the Universal Church commanding the Scepters of Kings Gerebert Epist 18. but the expedition was not so soon begun Of all the Popes from Sylvester the II. unto Gregory the VII inclusivè Benno testifieth that they did exceed Jannes and Jambres in jugleries although the height of Antichristian pride be referred unto Gregory the VII and others after him Io. Naucler in volum 2. generat 31. faith The Popes of that time had departed from the foot-steps of Peter ..... and it is horrour to hear what vile things were done by almost 28. Popes immediately succeeding After the death of Sylvester saith Benno was strife among his Necromancing Disciples each contending to usurp the Papacy 2. JOHN the XIX aliàs XVII by the help of the Divel who then gave The election of the Pope is changed the Papal Chair followed the Sorcerer Sylvester saith Bale
of his Commission against the deposing of married Priests for that their heresie the people cried with shouting The Pope hath no Authority over Millan neither will we lose our liberty which our Fathers have maintained nor will we go under the yoke of any forain Church With this the Bells rang the Trumpets sounded and all the People were in an uproar so that at this time nothing could be altered nor in all the days of Landulf After his death his Brother Erlembald coming into his room stirred the former coal he went to Pope Alexander II. unto Luca ann 1065. and easily obtained a Decree against the Clergy The Arch-Bishop would have it examined on Easter-day but Erlembald and Ariald commoved the People so that Wido durst not go out at his gate In the next year Wido and his followers prepared themselves against their enemies and Ariald fled for fear when he was drawn back by force he was accused as the Author of the tumult and shamefully put to death then Erlembald held his peace But the next year he obtained another Decree That none should be accounted a lawful Bishop without the consent of the Pope notwithstanding the election and approbation of the People and Clergy In the absence of Wido he compelled the People and Clergy to subscribe this Decree The Bishop was astonished when he heard it and being now old and desirous of rest renounced his Bishoprick and sent the badges of his Office to the Emperor Henry IV. who sent Godifrid Castillionaeus into that See ann 1068. Pope Alexander threatned him with his curse that he should not be so rash and Erlembald by force thrust him out of the City And when Wido died the Pope sent Atho a Priest of Millan into that See at the request of Erlembald who also caused him to be received with great murmuration of the People that such dignity should depend on the Pope The Emperor did pursue his right and therefore a new broil began twixt him and the Pope The Pope accused the Emperor of Simony and Heresie By this means the Church of Millan was brought under the yoke of the See of Rome Ph. Mornay in Myst pag. 237. About that time the Saracens had divided Spain into several Dominions and those Lords were called Kings they could not agree among themselves and the Bishops took usually arms for their several Kings especially the Bishops of Ausa Gerumda and Barcinon went under the colours of King Zeluma against Almahad and were all three killed in battel Baron Annal. ad ann 1011. This division among the Saracens gave some advantage unto Alfonso V. and Ferdinand yet for some ages they could not subdue nor expel those Kings of Castile Infidels 9. Before this time Priests were forbidden to marry but could not be Contention for marriage of the Clergy restrained from their liberty and many had their own wife In the year 1074. Hildebrand in a Synod at Rome condemned all married Priests as Nicolaitans He directed his Bulls as they called them to Bishops Dukes and other Powers declaring them all to be no Priests which had a Wife forbidding People to salute them or pay them Tithes or to acknowledge them in any way This was a new example and as many said inconsiderate judgement saith Matth. Parisi in Williel Conquest and against the sentence of the Fathers especially it was against Canon Apostolor 6. saying Let not a Bishop or Presbyter put away his Wife under pretext of Religion or if he put her away let him be excommunicate It was against their own decrees Dist 28. c. Siquis If any shall teach That a Priest should for Religion forsake his Wife let him be anathema And Dist 31. c. Siquis If any do blame Marriage or shall detest a faithful Woman for lying with her own Husband or think the Man culpable as if for that cause he cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven let him be anathema It was contrary to Pope Leo IX who in epist ad Nicet Abba saith We always confess It is not lawful unto a Bishop or Priest nor Deacon to forsake his own Wife for Religion but that he should give her food and raiment and not lie with her bodily as we read the holy Apostles did even as the blessed Apostle saith Have we not power to lead about a Wife a Sister Pol. Vergil de inven rer li. 5. c. 4. is large in this purpose and concludes thus This I may say That that forced chastity was so far from being better then married chastity that no crime did bring imprint or burn-mark more shame upon the Order more evil upon Religion or more sorrow unto good men then the blot of Priests lusts therefore it may be thought useful both unto the Christian Re-publique and to the Order that at last the liberty of marriage might be restored unto Priests which they may keep holily without infamy rather then to defile themselves most filthily with that vice The Index expurgatorius of the year 1571. hath ordained all these words and many more of that Chapter to be blotted out And what obedience was given unto this Decree of Hildebrand is clear in Naucle vol. 2. gener 36. where he hath this Epistle unto Constance Gregory Bishop the servant of God's servants unto the Clerks and Laicks both greater and lesser in the Diocy of Constance salutation and blessing We have sent unto our brother your Bishop Otho exhortatory letters by which according to the necessity of our Office by Apostolical Authority we have commanded him to exclude Simoniacal heresie altogether out of his Church and that he shall earnestly preach the chastity of Priests But your Bishop neither reverencing the command of blessed Peter nor taking heed unto his own duty as it is reported unto us hath not done what we did fatherly advise and not onely disobediently but rebelliously hath he as we have understood publikely permitted unto his Clerks altogether contrary unto our command or rather of blessed Peter that they which have wives may keep them and they which have none may have them by unlawful temerity which so soon as we heard taking it ill we wrote again unto him shewing how he had provoked our indignation and also we have summoned him unto our Synod at Rome to give the reasons and in the audience of the whole Convent declare the causes of his disobedience if they be reasonable These things most dear children we make known unto you that we may provide for your salvation for if your Bishop will with open hand fight against us and be contumacious it is not fit he should rule c. Wherefore as we have said by Apostolical Authority we command all those which are obedient unto God and blessed Peter if he shall continue hardened that ye give him no reverence of obedience nor think that to be any hurt unto your soul for if he will be contrary unto the Apostolical precepts we by the Authority of blessed Peter do absolve
they have done if they had lived in the days of Domician Decius c. Avenii lib. cit who recordeth many other Synods condemning that faction As also Sigebert a Monck of Gemblac who hath continued the Epitome of Jerom and hath briefly written the History of the Church from the year 381. untill 1112 there he noteth many errors of the Popes namely That they presume to absolve Subjects from their Allegiance unto their Princes He saith of them False Prophets false Apostles and false Priests have arisen who deceive the People with a false Religion and dare advance themselves above all that is worshipped while they seek to establish their own power and dominion they have put away Christian charity and simplicity 13. When Bishops and Priests became Monarchs some Monarchs became Reformation of some Countreys Pastors as Olaus King of Norway and Steuchilus King of Sweden taught their Subjects the Word of God Herman Contractus Count of Vering infirm in body was admired in the knowledge of the Greek Arabick and Latin tongues singular in Philosophy especially Astronomy Rhetorick Poesie and Divinity Jo. Lampad in Mellifi remembreth also that some Germans were then persecuted for denying Purgatory the bodily presence of Christ in the Eucharist and the worship of Images Ecbert a Monck wrote against them and contemptuously called them Cathari or Puritans the Emperors also and the Popes made Constitutions against them The People Heneti were compelled to receive Bishops and Priests in the days of Otho I. but after his death they killed the Bishops they threw down the Churches and returned to Idolatry Henry III. restoreth the Christian Religion and erecteth Bishopricks among them Io. Pap. in Hist Convers After the death of Steven King of Hungary were sturrs there for many years in the year 1045. the Princes of the Kingdom being vexed by the severity of King Peter sent for Andrew Bela and Leventa which were of the kin●ed of Steven and banished into Bohem and Poland The King understanding this Plot did cause to be hanged Vi●ca Bua and Buchna three chief men and punished others cleaving unto them other ways For this cause the Nobles convening at Canad sent for Andrew and Leventa again with solemn promises and oath to bring the Kingdom into their obedience So soon as they came all the People came unto them at Novum Castrum demanding first to permit the People to live after the ancient way of their Fathers in Paganism to kill the Bishops and Clergy to forsake Christianism and worship their Idols which was granted The chief of them Vacha began in the Castle Belos and his Son gathereth Socerers and Soothsayers by whose inchantments he purchaseth the Peoples favor Then the People threw down the Churches and killed all the Latin and Dutch Priests cruelly Likewise Andrew and Leventa levieth an Army against the Christians And four Bishops Gerard Bistrit Buld and Beneth and Zehung Count of Alba meet together in the Church of God where Gerard saith Brethren fellow Bishops and other believers here present we shall to day go with the Crown of Martyrdom unto our Lord Jesus Christ for this night I saw the Lord Jesus Christ communicating unto us the Sacrament of his body and blood After Mass they went with the King and his Army and were killed at Pesch and the King was taken and brought to Alba where he died ann 1047. Then Andrew was crowned and so soon as he was free from enemies he enacted a Law That all Hungarians should renounce Paganism under pain of death and himself did profess the faith in Christ Nevertheless the Emperor Henry went down the Danube with a great Army and besiedgeth the Castle Pesch some Hungarians in the night-time boareth all the Emperor's Ships under the water and drowned them so that the Army was weakened Naucler Gener. 35. And in Gener. 36. he shews how the Emperor sought peace and hardly obtained it for continuing peace they did agree that Solomon King Andrew's Son should marry Sophia the Emperor's Daughter But then Bela the King's Brother made a new insurrection and by help of the Polonians invades the Kingdom and prevails so that Andrew was killed and Solomon fled into Germany and Bela was crowned at Alba Immediately he calleth a Parliament for setling and ordering the Kingdom Many of the common People especially the Countrey men say unto the King Grant unto us to live after the maner of our Fathers in Paganism to put away Bishops and Priests and to retain our Tithes and to lay waste the Churches The King was amased and craves a delay for three days On the third day the chief of the multitude come for the answer At the King's command Soldiers fall upon them and then invade the multitude and when some of them were killed others cry for mercy and renounce Paganism By conferring the former part with this it appears that two things especially did hinder the Reformation of the Heathens at that time to wit They had Latin Priests who did the Service in an unknown language and they took it ill to be burthened with payment of Tithes and moreover Religion was pressed upon them by the sword In time of the wars twixt the Emperor Henry and the Saxons Mistiwoi a Prince of the Wandals did so approve himself unto D. Bernard that he did espouse unto him his Sister Before the day of marriage Tiaderik a Marquess said unto the Duke It was a base thing to give such a Lady unto a dog So soon as this was reported unto Mistiwoi he said Are we then dogs is this the reward of our trouble if we be dogs we will let them feel our madness The Wandals then renounce Christianity and profess hostility against Christians at Aldenburgh they made their sport with sixty Priests they destroy Hamburgh and the Bishop Benno escapes with his life they expel the Marquess of Brandeburgh out of all his Lands Duke Bernard levieth an Army against them and the Emperor sent aid unto him In this fight Mistiwoi was killed and the Wandals were brought into payment of their former tribute But for eighty years they were not sincere in Religion saith Al. Crantz in Saxo. li. 4. c. 34. In the days of the Emperor Conrad Mistiwoi Duke of Poland did renounce the faith and raising an Army made great havock in Germany twixt the Rivers Sala and Albe destroyed many Churches and Monasteries and killed many thousand men When he heard that the Emperor was preparing against him he returns with his spoil Loc. cit c. 36. 14. About the year 980. Theodor Bishop of Antioch besought the Emperor Of the Manichees John Zimisca to remove the Manichees who called themselves Cathari and Pavacimi into some remote place because they overspread all and infected many with their Heresies The Emperor transports many of them into Philippopolis in Thracia where Alexius Commenus Emperor in the days of Henry IV. caused dispute with them and by information did prevail with many of them
the Bishops to have been more ancient and saith that Amphibal was the first Bishop of the Scots who lived in the Isle of Man where King Cratili●th built a stately Church to the honor why would he not say for the service or worship of our Savior and called it Sodorense Fa●●m and that was the Cathedral of the Bishops of the Isles till the Scots were dispossessed of that Isle and from thence the Isle Jona or Icolmkil hath been the seat of the Bishops Then page 7. he telleth of Ninian the first Bishop of Galloway or Candida Casa and of Palladius sent by Eclestin Bishop of Rome and that he ordained Servan Bishop of Orkney and Terva● Bishop of the Northern Picts Page 11. he telleth of a Bishop about Aldham but saith he the story doth not express his name For answer the Histories shew that such men were in Scotland but that they were not Prelates or Bishops in that s●nse as of late the name was used is very certain For first All who have written the History of Scotland do testifie that the Church was governed without Bishops and by Teachers who were called Culdees that is The worshippers of God or who taught the worship of God and these were called sometimes Monks for their strictness of life and Priests or Presbyters and sometimes they were called Bishops either in the sense of the Scripture or according to the Custom of other Nations but by that term declaring them to be lawful Teachers or Pastors Boeth li. 6. c. 5. calleth them by these three names Culdees Monks and Priests and Laurentius the second Bishop of Canterbury calleth them Fratres Episcopos Abbates And Bishop Jewel in defense of the Apolo page 122. saith These three names Bishop Priest and Presbyter were all one And it is certain that at Icolmkil was a Colledge of Students and there was one who is sometime called Abbas and sometime Doctor and sometime Episcopus as in that Epistle written by the Clergy of Rome after the death of Pope Severin which is directed unto the Bishops Presbyters Doctors or Abbots These Titles are knit with the particle sive Likewise about the year 600. Columba was the Church-man which was most respected in Scotland and he was the Doctor of Icolmkil for as the King Aidan did use his counsel so when he fought against the Picts Columba did call his Colleagues together and exhorted them to turn their supplications into thanksgiving because the King had got the victory albeit the place of the battel was distant from Jona where Columba lived and was at that time 200. miles at least saith Bishop Spotswood And the same Bishop calleth Convallan Governor of that Monastery after Columba And Buchanan li. 6. in the life of King Kenneth III. saith The ancient Bishops of the Scots were chosen out of the Monasteries and these Monasteries were not for Monks in that sense as they speak afterwards for in li. 7. Buchanan speaking of King Malcolm and the Colledge at Scone saith Malcolm turned the Colledge of Priests that was there into a Monastery of Monks Secondly That the Church of Scotland was not subordinate to Rome and that they loved not the Discipline nor Rites of Rome is most certain by that Contestation which was in Century VII Thirdly That testimony of the Synod at Celicyth in England about the year 816. is without all contradiction that at that time were no Prelates in Scotland seeing they testifie that the Scots gave no honor to Metropolitans nor other Bishops and therefore they forbid the Scots to have any Function in England But in the contrary Bishop Spotswood telleth of Wiro and Plechelm which were consecrate at Rome Bishop of the Scots in the year 632. as it is written saith he in Baron Annal. ad ann 632. and he addeth But by the Cardinals leave our Church had no such Custom before that time nor will it be shewed that before these two any did go to Rome either to be consecrate or confirmed And then he addeth We finde him Wiro shortly thereafter turn Confessor to King Pipin But if he was Confessor to King Pipin he was not Bishop of the Scots nor was Pipin King of France till the year 750. and so Wiro must have been above 160. years old ere he was Confessor I have looked on that place of Baronius and he shews his Author to be Surius ad Maij diem 8. and all both Papists and others hold Surius to be a most fabulous writer as in that particular he writes fabulously for he saith Wiro was Confessor unto Duke Pipin and that Pipin was wont to come unto him with bare feet when he made his Confession This I say is fabulous seeing it is marked as an unmeasureable shew of humility that Justinian II. Emperor made such obedience unto Pope Constantine in falling down at his feet and did not cast off his shoes Nor can it be shewed that any Writer of that Century hath the word Confessor in that sense or that such an Office was at that time In the days of the Emperor Theodosius some such thing had been in use upon a particular occasion but upon a vile scandal it was forbidden Socrat. Hist l. 5. c. 19. And then Baronius ad ann 697. calleth Wiro Episcopum Deirorum when he speaks of the Synod at Utrecht Now it is clear in the life of Pope Gregory I. prefixed before his works that a part of England was at that time called Deira therefore Wiro was not a Bishop of Scotland and therein Baronius Plechelm is called de Candida Massa or Casa But Bishop Spotswood page 4. saith No Bishop in Scotland had any Diocy before King Malcolm III. and so that phrase de candida casa sheweth that Plechelm was born at that place and not that he was Bishop there Likewise Bishop Spotswood page 20. speaks of two Bishops Sedulus and Pergustus who having assisted in a Synod at Rome called by Gregory II. in the year 721. after their return made great disturbance in the Church for erecting of Images It is true in the subscriptions of that Synod such names are there and the one Sedulus is called Episcopus Scotorum and the other is called Episcopus Pictorum And so every Presbyter who went out of Scotland was called a Scotch Bishop but that he was a Prelate of Scotland it is contrary to that testimony of the Synod at Celicyth in Century IX which was near a 100. years after Gregory II. And then see what he did he pressed the worship of Images and the Culdees denied it to be lawful saith Io. Bale Cent. XIV and therefore many of them were deposed such was the fruit of their gading to Rome And Bishop Spotswood page 26. saith expresly that Kellach was the first Bishop of this Kingdom who went to Rome to seek confirmation and that was about the year 904. This instance condemneth what he hath said before of all those others whom he calleth Scotch Bishops Neither
one and so it may be understood of other vertues And these good motions or affections are merits and the gifts of God whereby we attain meremur both the increase of them and other things which consequently are given unto us here or hereafter Here if we remember what was said before from lib. 1. Dist 41. A. there is no merit of mercy and then consider how he here defineth merit to be a good motion of the minde and remunerable it is plain that he thinketh not man deserveth a reward nor that the reward is given for the work but that God of his mercy giveth more grace and other things here and hereafter unto them which being healed by grace have good motions of minde And this is the large and improper use of the word which is not seldom among the writings of the Ancients since and in the time of Pelagius And in the Section G. he hath these words out of Augustine When God doth crown our merits he crowneth nothing but his own gifts wherefore eternal life which God rendereth unto preceeding merits because even these merits whereunto it is rendered are not of us but wrought in us by grace even that life is rightly called grace because it is given freely or graciously neither is it therefore graciously because it is not given unto merits but because even these merits are given by grace unto whom it is given But if the word merit be taken properly it is a work not owed for which a proportionable reward is given and in this sense neither Lombard nor any of the meer Ancients did use that word how beit he useth it oft in that larger sense Dist 32. B. Behold he Augustin sheweth clearly that sin is dimitted in baptism not that it abideth not after baptism but because its guiltiness is abolished in baptism and he sheweth also that it is dimitted the same way because by the grace of baptism concupiscence it self is tamed and minished Lib. 3. Dist 25. A. That is sound faith whereby we believe that no man whether of riper or less age can be freed from the contagion of death and obligation of sin which he hath contracted in his first birth but by the one Mediator between God and men Jesus Christ by the most wholesome faith of which man and the same being God the righteous were saved which did believe that he was to come in the flesh for their faith and ours is one and the same therefore seeing all the righteous before the incarnation or after it did not live nor do live but by faith of the incarnation of Christ certainly that which is written There is no other name under heaven by which we must be saved was powerful to save mankinde from that time in which it was defiled in Adam In lib. 4. he speaketh much of the conversion of the bread and wine in the Sacrament And Dist 11. he saith But if you ask what sort of conversion it is whether formal or substantial or of any other sort I am not able to define it and I acknowledge it is not formal because the kindes of things that were before do continue both taste and weight C. If you ask the way how it can be I answer shortly the mystery of faith may be safely believed but not safely searched In Lombard's time transubstantiation was not an Article of faith Dist 12. It is asked Whether that that the Priest doth is properly a sacrifice or if Christ be sacrificed dayly or if he was once onely sacrificed It may be answered shortly That which is offered and consecrated by the Priest is called a sacrifice and oblation because it is the remembrance and representation of the true sacrifice and holy offering that was made upon the altar of the Cross and Christ died once on the Cross and there was offered in himself but he is dayly offered in the Sacrament because in the Sacrament is a remembrace of that which was once done Wherefore Augustin saith We hold it sure that Christ rising from death dieth not now and nevertheless lest we forget what was done it is kept in our remembrance every year to wit so oft as the Pascha is celebrated Is Christ killed so oft but onely a yearly remembrance representeth what was once done and so maketh us to be moved as if we saw the Lord on the Cross Here we may observe that where it is said sed tantùm anniversaria recordatio the Masters of Lovane have turned that tantùm into tamen the one is exclusive but that they love not In lib. 3. Dist 22. D. It is asked whether it may be said conveniently that the Son of man or that man came down from heaven or be every where as the Son of God or God is said to have come from heaven and to be every where To this we say if the meaning of that sentence be referred unto the unity of his person it may be safely said but if to the distinction of natures it can be granted no way Dist 27. F. That command Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy heart is not at all fulfilled by man in this life but in part and not wholly because we love in part as we know but in part Therefore Lombard did not believe perfection of mans obedience not works of supererogation In many other particulars he is contrary to the Canons of Trent It is true he was the first that hath The number of the Sacraments named seven Sacraments the Fathers in former times took the name in a large sense as Augustin calleth the sign of the Cross a Sacrament contra Faust lib. 19. cap. 14. and on Psal 106. he calleth the several mystical or allegorical sentences Sacraments and after this the Glossa on Gratian Dist 100. c. Siquis calleth the consecration of the altar a Sacrament and Dist 26. c. Acutius it saith The Bishop is a Sacrament and Tho. Aquines Sum. par 3. q. 6. giveth the name to sundry other things If then we will reckon all that were called Sacraments they will draw nearer the number of seventy then seven But when the ancients speak more properly of the Sacraments of the New Testament they do name but two as I have noted in some already But then first did Lombard make this reckoning Lib. 4. Dist 2. The Sacraments of the new Law are baptism confirmation the bread of blessing that is the Eucharist pennance extream unction order marriage whereof some give remedy against sin and bestow helping grace others are onely for remedy as marriage some do support with grace and vertue as the Eucharist And in the margin it is said Nec hic recte sentit Magister And there is no small controversie among their School-men for five of them to wit who was the Author of them in what part of the Scriptures have they any ground what is their sign Nevertheless the Councel of Trent hath accursed all men who hold that there be more or fewer
then seven Ses 7. ca. 1. Likewise Lombard lib. 4. Dist 21. hath the question Whether sin can be forgiven after this life and he speaketh of a fire of transitory tribulation through which he thinketh some must pass but he speaketh not of the place nor time of continuance there nor of sacrifice for the souls there nor of any mans power to deliver souls out of it 31. The Apostle Paul professed that he knew not Christ according to the Three orders of religious Knights flesh but in this Century they began to desire the sight of Christ's sepulchre and frequent peregrinations thither some in pennance by injunction of Priests and some of their carnal accord Whence arose three Orders of religious Knights 1. Hospitalarii who received the pilgrims in lodging and defended them from the infidels Io. Naucler in generat 39. writeth that Raymund their Master did many ways injure the Patriarch of Jerusalem and other Prelates for whosoever was accursed or excommunicated by the Patriarch or others Raymund did receive them into communion and when they were dying he gave them the Sacrament and did many other things contrary unto the priviledges of the Church and when the Patriarch did complain there arose a sedition among the Citizens and they ran furiously into the Church of the Grave against the Patriarch The Church of Rome saith he seemeth to have given the occasion of so great confusion for she did exempt that Order from the jurisdiction of the Patriarch Afterwards they left their hospitality and became soldiers against the Turks under the title of Knights of S. John and then of the Knights of Rhodos where they dwelt until the year 1●23 when the Turks expelled them and then they come to Malta whence they now have their name 2. Templarii which was instituted by Fulco King of Jerusalem and from them were named the Temple Land that were dedicated unto them throughout Christendom as they had their name from the Temple of Jerusalem they were cut off for the most part about the year 1305. and their means were given to the Knights of S. John Platin. in Clemen 5. of them we shall have occasion to speak again 3. Teutonici so named from their Nation they professed both hospitality and warfar when they were expelled out of Jerusalem they abode at Ptolemeis in Egypt Pol. Virg. de inven rer lib. 7. cap. 5. and from thence they come into Prussia as followeth In this time began many sorts of Friers 32. Some Nations were then turned from Paganism as some in Pomerania Conversion of some Nations about the year 1106. and they returned to it again until the year 1124. when Boleslaus Prince of Poland compelled Wartislaus Prince of Pomer and all his subjects to receive the faith these were a sort of Wandals in Poritz Stetine Wolin c. Wencelm Bishop of Bamberg went thither and and was called The Apostle of Pomer Crantz in Saxo. lib. 5. cap. 44 45. he preached among them thirty years After his death their Duke Pribislaus forsook the faith and within six years Henry surnamed the proud Duke of Saxony compelled them to receive the Gospel again thereafter he continued in profession but was little careful of the people who continued in their Idolatry until Woldemar King of the Danes did threaten them that he would never cease from wars until they would embrace Christianity Norway received the Christian faith by the preaching of Hadrian an English man which thereafter was Pope Hadrian IV. The before named Boleslaus subdued the Pruteni or Borussians and compelled them to receive Christianism yet thereafter they forsook it until the Knights Teutonici conquered their Land about the year 1317. There was also a new plantation of Rugani An. 1168. Jaremar their Duke went before the people yea and he preached the word unto them Io. Papp in Histo convers Gent. About that time a ship of Lubert going unto Livonia the Merchants took with them a Monk Meinhard when he saw the miserable blindeness of the people he caused a little cottage to be set up for him and dwelt there until he learned their language and then he taught them the grounds of Religion thereafter he had great authority among them and was the first Bishop of Riga Berthold a Monk of St. Paul's at Breme was sent thither after him by the Arch-Bishop of Breme he found many Pagans still there and because they would not believe the word he thought to daunt them with the sword as Alb. Crantz in Saxon. lib. 7. cap. 13. saith He sought from Pope Celestin a Bull of remission of sins unto all Soldiers which would go and fight against the Infidels of Livonia and he was killed in the first fight in the year 1198. Then Albert went through Saxony and Vandalia and preached remission of sins to fight under the sign of the Cross against the Infidels of Livonia Many went with him and bought that Land with their blood At that time began a new Order of Fratres Crucegladiatores and they did agree with the Church-men that they should have the third part of the Land this is called Conversio Vandalica but afterwards they would be Lords of the whole Land scarcely leaving the third part unto the Church At that time the Danes conquered the City Revel and the Bishop thereof was subordinate unto the Metropolitan of Denmark When the Teutonick Knights came and possessed Prussia the Crucegladiatores of Livonia joyned with them but their Successors did repent it for the Teutonicks made conquest of all and that name did fail CHAP. IV. Of BRITANNY 1. HENRY I. the third Son of William the Conqueror began to reign Henry I. opposeth the Pope in the year 1100. for his knowledge of the Liberal Arts he was called The Clerk He paid Peter-pence unto the Pope but he would not suffer his Subjects to appeal unto Rome because the Popes have not continued in the steps of Peter said he and hunt after earthly lucre they have not his power seeing as all may now see they follow not his holiness And when Pope Paschalis did challenge him he returned answer saying Let your Holiness know that while I live by God's grace the Prerogative and Customs of the Kingdom of England shall not be empaired and though I would so far abuse my self which God forbid my Nobles yea all the Commons in England would not suffer it Wherefore most dear Father let your bountifulness be so moderate toward us that you do not inforce me which I shall unwillingly do to depart from your obedience Matth. Parisien And contrary to the Roman Canons and without licence of the Pope he married Maude Daughter to Malcolm Cammore being then a Nun in Winchester In the year 1125. John Bishop of Cremona was sent from Rome and in a Synod at London he did urge the single life of the Clergy and said It is a vile crime that a man rising from the side of his concubine should consecrate the body of
neck unto the sword nor do I think it expedient to advise any more with my Lords the Prelates nor if they will do otherwise do I consent unto them for it is more honest to deny quickly what is demanded unjustly then to drive off time by delays seeing he is the less deceived who is refused betimes When Gilbert had so made an end some English both Prelates and Nobles commend the yong Clerk that he had spoken so boldly for his Nation without flattering and not abashed at the gravity of such Authority but others because he spoke contrary unto their minde said A Scot is naturally violent and In naso Scoti piper But Roger Arch-Bishop of York which principally had moved this business to bring the Church of Scotland unto his See uttered a groan and then with a merry countenance laid his hand on Gilbert's head saying Ex tua phareta non exiit illae sagitta as if he had said When ye stand in a good cause do not forethink what ye shall say for in that hour it shall be given unto you This Gilbert was much respected at home after that And Pope Celestin put an end unto this debate for he sent his Bull unto King William granting that neither in Ecclesiastical nor Civil affairs the Nation should answer unto any forain Judge whatsoever except onely unto the Pope or his Legate specially constituted So far in that Register of Dunkel 5. The above named Henry II. was so admired thourgh the world for his Henry II. prudent and unfortunate prudence and prowess that Manuel Emperor of the Greeks Frederick Emperor of Germany the French King with many other famous Princes sent unto him as a School-Master of justice for determination of obscure doubts Alfonso King of Castile and Saucius King of Navar being at variance for some possessions did of their own accord submit themselves unto his judgement and he found an overture to both their good liking This is to be marked because the worshippers of Becket call him a vitious Prince In the year 1181. the Patriarch of Jerusalem and the Master of the Templaries having no King and being distressed by Saladin did profer unto the same Henry the Kingdom of Jerusalem and brought unto him the keys of their Cities He refused because of his weighty affairs at home They were opprest by the Infidels and he had no more prosperity for his Son would have the Government as well as the Title of the Kingdom and the Father did the service of a Steward unto his Son yea and more disdainfully did the Son entreat his Father till he was taken away by death and his Brother Richard was also a grief unto his Father and so was the third Brother John The true cause of all his woes may be thought the oppression of some professors of truth for Pol. Virgil. in Hist Anglor lib. 13. testifieth that about the year 1160. thirty teachers came from Germany into England and taught the right use of Baptism of the Lord's Supper c. and were put to death It is true Virgil calleth them worshippers of Divels but we shall hear anon how all professors of truth were reviled and John of Sarisbuny at the same time wrote saying He who speaketh for the truth of faith or sincerity of maners according to the Law of God is called superstitious envious and which is capital an enemy of the King After four years others which were in contempt called Publicans and Waldenses taught in England that the Roman Church had left the faith of Christ and was become the whore of Babel the barren fig-tree no obedience should be given unto the Pope or his Bishops Monks were dead carion their vows frivolous their characters were the mark of the Beast Io. Bale Cent. 2. § 96. in Appen And in the year 1166. the same Henry drew some professors unto judgement at Oxford because they were said to dissent from the doctrine of the Roman Church he caused them to be burnt with an hot iron and banished them I. Fox in Act. Mon. 6. At that time were many married Priests in Britanny Ephleg left his Married Clerks Son Cedda to be his Successor in the Priesthood at Plinmouth Arnold Dunprust left his Son Robert likewise in the same County unto Robert did his Son succeed In Norfolk Wulkerel dimitted his Priest-hood at Dyssa unto his lawful Son William Hugh Howet in Sarisbury John in Exchester and Oliver in Nottingham all succeeded unto their Fathers Io. Bale Cent. 3. § 10. in Appen In Ireland fifteen Bishops of Lesmore succeeded lineally and hereditarily for the space of 200. years and of them eight Sons succeeded unto their fathers Bernard in Vita Malac. until the year 1121. when the Bishop Celsus having no Son did as by testament name Malachias Bishop of Connereth to be his Successor and his friends as heirs did resist for five years Malachias had correspondence with Bernard of Claraval and had two Monks sent from that Abbey to begin an Abbey of that Order in Ireland but they returned against the Bishops will wherefore Bernard wrote unto him his 317. Epistle exhorting that he would not leave off the purpose but rather be more vigilant in that new place and Land so unaccustomed with Monastical life and excusing the Monks that their returning was occasioned by the unto wardness of these brethren living in a Land without discipline and especially not accustomed to submit unto such counsels This Malchias did urge the single life of Priests in Ireland He went to Rome and became Legate but died in the way beside Bernard 7. John of Sarisbury Bishop of Carnotum was familiar with his Countrey-man Iohn Bishop of Sarisbury Pope Hadrian IV. when they were alone in a chamber at Benevento Hadrian asked him what the world thought and spake of him and of the Church After a little form of excuse he said I will tell what I hear spoken every where they say The Church of Rome which is the Mother of all Churches is become a step dame unto them and the Pope is called across and grief unto all men and intolerable for pride as the zeal of their Fathers had erected Churches so now they do decay and the Pope was glorious not onely in purple but in glancing gold the Cardinals and Bishops are called Scribes and Pharisees laying heavy burthens on mens shoulders which themselves will not touch with their finger their Palaces are glorious and the Churches of Christ are polluted by their hands they spoil the Nations as if they would scrape together the treasures of Croesus But the most High dealeth most wisely with them for they become often a prey unto others and I think so long as they stray out of the way they shall never want a scourge from God Then said the Pope What thinkest thou He answered There is danger on every side I fear the blame of flattering or lying if I alone do speak contrary unto the world and I
should continue in a chamber and not come forth nor have a dish of meat but one until they agree But neither were these observed He advanced the Dominicans to high Dignities even to red hats 11. INNOCENTIUS the V. was the first Pope of the Order of Dominicans for Gregory had advanced so many of them that then the locusts had power to choose their own King He procured peace betwixt the Hetrurians and Pisanes and absolved them from the curse of Pope Gregory He had a purpose to abrogate the Canons of the election of the Pope but he died in the fifth moneth 12. HADRIAN the V. in his short Papacy of forty days sent Letters unto the Emperor Rodulph enviting him to come into Italy and take the Kingdom of both Sicilies from Charles Duke of Anjow 13. JOHN some call him XX. some say XXI and others XXII as appeareth by what is said before of the Johns sat but eight moneths and did many things smelling of folly and levity saith Platina to wit he made these Articles against the begging Friers 1. Christ as he was man on earth by lapse of time had proper and immediate right of garments shoes and other things partly by donation of believers and partly he bought them 2. Christ never commanded his disciples to renounce their right and possession of temporal things 3. Christ gave no other law of life to his Apostles then to his other disciples 4. Christ commanded not his Apostles simply that they should possess neither silver nor gold except onely in that journey when they were going to preach and thereafter they might have these things again 5. The Apostles had their own propriety and right of clothes shoes and swords and after the holy Ghost was sent on them these words We have left all things are not to be understood as if they renounced their propriety save onely in affection 6. The Apostles might have had their particular dominion of Castles or Villages or any other temporal goods 7. The Apostles notwithstanding their Evangelical perfection might have had immoveable goods in common as Lands but they had no such things in Judea because in the Spirit they foresaw that they must go among the Nations 8. The Apostles never made a vow to renounce temporal things Catal. ●est ver lib. 17. These Articles were against the profession of the Friers but experience sheweth whether they were against their affection He revoketh the constitutions of Pope Gregory concerning the chamber and after him the election went not in that maner but was more weighed by the purse until Pope Celestin the V. renewed the same Canons He canonized Lewes Bishop of Tolouse and Son of Charles King of France and Thomas Aquinas the black Frier He dreamed of long life and said he knew so by the stars but as he was walking under a vault which he had made for his pleasure at Viterbio it fell upon him and the next day he was found among the rubbish Platina 14. NICOLAUS the III. a Roman of the family of Ursini was of as great authority as any Pope before him Pope Clemens had given the government of Rome unto Charles Duke of Anjow under the Title of Senator and Nicolaus took this office unto himself and he inciteth Peter King of Arragon to claim the right of both Sicilies because he had married Constantia the onely childe of Manfred and take that Kingdom He was the Author of that famous Decretal in 6. in c. Fundamenta tit de Election electi potestate to wit God hath assumed Peter into the society of individual unity the Lord would have him to be called that that he was himself saying Thou art Peter that from him as the head he might pour his gifts on his body the Church Thus they became more arrogant and blasphemous He took in Bononia Flaminia and other Cities into the Papal See He made a Law that no King nor Kings Son should be Senator of Rome He began to talk of making two Kings of his own kinred one of Hetruria and another of Lombardie but he was prevented by death Platina saith He is reported to have loved his kinsfolks too much and to have robbed from others to give unto them without all reason He had a Park for hares at Rome and sat almost four years 15. MARTINE the IV. a French man restoreth contrary to the Law of Nicolaus Charles to his office of Senator of Rome and government of Hetruria Whereas many Popes had their ordinary residence at Viterbio he was forced to flee because of sedition betwixt the Italian and French Cardinals and be Crowned at Vrbe Vetere or Orvieto Now Charles thought to have subdued Michael Paleologus Emperor of the East but Michael and Peter of Arragon had secret correspondence and levy an Army upon common charges The Pope understanding this sent unto Peter asking Why he was amassing such an Army Peter answered If I knew my shirt were privy to my intention I would burn it So Peter passeth over with his Army unto the coast of Africa there he took some prey and returned into Sardinia awaiting his opportunity to come into Sicily The Sicilians hated the Vigiliae Siculae French and they all conspired that on Easter day when the bell was tolling to the evening Mass they should kill all the French it came so to pass that they spared not a woman with childe That night was thereafter Vigiliae Siculae Then John Prochyta the chief author of that conspiracy advertiseth Peter and brought him in Charles was in Italy and then were continual wars betwixt the two Sicilies until Charles died and Peter took his Son and held him captive The Pope sent his Legate unto Naples to hold that Kingdom in name of the captive Charles and he excommunicated Peter for sacriledge and gave his Kingdoms of Castil and Arragon unto any who would enter and occupy them Behold the contrariety of the Popes Peter was not afraid of the vain curse of the pretended Peter who died in sorrow in the third year of his Papacy Martin gave unto the begging Friers liberty to hear confessions and administer the Sacraments 16. HONORIUS the IV. was elected at Perusio when his Brother Pandolf was Roman Senator He made haste to Rome and dwelt on the hill Aventine He ratified the excommunication of Peter In his time was wars betwixt Peter and Charles betwixt the Genoways and Venetians and betwixt the Pope and Guido Feltrenus for the Province of Flaminia Then sickness was so rise that so many Cardinals died that the remanent said God was against the election therefore it was delayed ten moneths 17. NICOLAUS the IV. hired Soldiers to go unto the defense of Ptolemais which onely remained of all the late Conquest when they came thither they did no less dammage to the Christians then to the Saracens by dissention or rather ambition of these Papalines Ptolemais was lost 196. years after the first Conquest Contrary unto Pope John XXII did
Nicolaus teach that Christ both by word and example had taught his Apostles perfect poverty that is to renounce and forsake all goods and reserve no right either in common or personal and that such poverty is holy and meritorious Bellarm. de Ro. Pon. lib. 4 cap. 14. He abode at Reate because of factions at Rome He had been a Dominican but then preferred he no Order to another Platin. and made Cardinals of all sorts and gave them equal priviledges When he was sick he called all the Cardinals together and discharged them of all power and authority that they all should live a private life They said he was phrenetick and left him Then he sent for a certain number of Minorites and gave them all red hats in sign that they were all Cardinals and he caused them all to swear that after his death they should suffer none to be chosen Pope but one of their own Order He sat four years P. Morn in Myst Then was such competition that the Cardinals could not agree the space of two years and three moneths At last Peter an Eremite and Father of the Celestines or 18. CELESTIN the V. was preferred for conceit of his godliness It was so great a wonder that a man was preferred for conceit of godliness that 200000 persons went to Perusio to see his coronation His residence was at Aquileia Platin. In his first Consistory he began to reform the Clergy of A reformation is attempted by ● Pope Rome and he said he would make it a pattern unto other Churches Hereby he procured such hatred of his Clergy that they sought to depose him and he was willing to renounce his seat The Princes were earnest that he would not quit his Chair and Charles King of Sicilies conveyed him to Naples and exhorted him that he would abhor so great indignity seeing the people every where were so prone towards him Platin. But the Cardinals especially Benedict Caietan caused it to be broached that the Pope was a doating old man and unfit for such a place and caused some of his own chamber to tell him that he would lose his life if he did not renounce the Papacy also Benedict spake thorow a reed into his chamber as if it had been a voice from heaven telling him that he should forsake the Papacy as being too weighty a burthen for him So when he had sat six moneths by the craft of Benedict who deceived the holy man saith Platin. he was perswaded to dimit if it were lawful Then they made an Act that it was lawful for the Pope to renounce his place this Act was by his Successor inserted into the Decretals ca. Quoniam Then Benedict left nothing undone by ambition and fraud to advance himself saith Platin. and was called 19. BONIFACE the VIII and by some others NERO the II. So soon as he was Crowned he said he would preveen sedition lest a Schism be made and some take Celestin for their head who was returning into his Eremitish life so he thrust the old man into the Castle of Famo of Henrici Celestin was sensible of the fraud and said unto Boniface Thou hast entered like a fox thou wilt reign like a lion and shalt die as a dog The old man died in sorrow and was canonized under the name of Peter the Confessor by Pope Clemens the V. and his feast is kept Iunii 17. Platin. Boniface took part with the Minorites and gave them special authority without licence of Bishop or Priest to preach hear confessions of all whosoever would come unto them nihil obstante He did first of all the Popes bear two swords and The Pope hath two swords endeavored to move fear more then piety unto Emperors Kings and Nations to give or take away Kingdoms to banish men and bring them home again at his pleasure Idem He excommunicated Philip King of France because he would not obey his command in the complaint of Edward King of England and Guido Earl of Flanders Then the King would suffer no money to be carried out of France Boniface curseth him and his seed to the fourth generation The Emperor Albert sought confirmation twice or thrice but Boniface said He was unworthy of the Crown who had killed his Lord. Then having set a diadem on his own head and a sword by his side he said I am Caesar Nevertheless thereafter he did confirm Albert but on condition to take arms against France I. Naucler Of all others he was the greatest fire-brand betwixt the Gibelines which were called Albi and the Gwelphs or Nigri and destroyed all the Gibelines so far as he could He augmented unto the Decretals with another book where are these constitutions The high Priest of Rome should be reproved by none albeit he cast down innumerable souls to hell Another We declare pronounce and define that upon necessity of salvation all humane creatures should be under the Pope of Rome Extrav c. unam sanctam de Maior obed Bellar. de Ro. Pon. l. 1. c. 9. confesseth that this is contrary unto the order of the primitive Church seeing at that time all the Apostles and first Teachers had equal power And lib. 2. cap. 12. he saith The Church which is but one should at all times keep one and the same government Therefore Boniface brought into the Church a strange and grievous innovation He proclaimed the first Jubilee to be The first Iubilee at Rome kept An. 1300. and promised full remission both of sin and punishment unto all who came that year to visit the Churches of the Apostles in solemnising of which he shewed himself one day in his Pontificals and according to his promise he gave remission unto all who came that year the next day he came forth in the Imperial ornaments and caused a naked sword to be carried before and the Herauld cried Behold two swords Bellarm. de Ro. Pon. lib. 5. ca. 5. teacheth that in these words Behold two swords and in the answer of Christ It is enough is no syllable of spiritual nor temporal power but onely that Christ forewarneth his disciples that in the time of his passion they were to be in such fear as they who sell their coat to buy a sword this he writeth not of his own invention but according to the ancients Albert Crantzius commendeth the Popes every where almost but in Saxo. lib. 8. cap. 35. when he is writing of this pomp of Boniface he cannot contain himself from crying Behold Peter thy Successor and thou Savior behold thy Vicar behold whither the pride of the Servant of servants hath climbed Pol. Virgil. de inven rer lib. 8. cap. 1. saith This feast was in imitation of the Jewish Jubilee or to draw away the people from remembring the ancient heathenish secular Plays Whatsoever was the pretext it appeareth the aim was to bring gain unto Rome and glory unto the Pope In the year 1301. he sent Boniface Bishop of Apamea or of Openham
Lords as they would be called had the precedency 14. The Jews lived then in England and waxed both in number and wealth The Iews in England An. 1235. they obtained from Pope Gregory the IX that they should not be taxed by Christian Kings and that they might have Christian servants and nurses An. 1257. they murthered a young boy in Lincoln therefore King Henry imprisoned seventy one of them at London The Minorites being hired for money procured their liberty for saith I. Bale Henry did not so much reign as bear the image of the Romish Beast but after that time the name of a Minorite was odious in the ears of English men Edward the I. banished all the Jews and escheated all their goods allowing them only a viaticum One good thing God wrought by them they left many Bibles in England whereby sundry of the learned were stirred to learn the Hebrew language as Gregory Huntington c. This Edward began to restrain the wealth of Monks and the power of Bishops When Lands were given to Monasteries or a Monastery bought any Land they did not acknowledge the Superior of those Lands so the King and Noble men were prejudiced of Wards Reliefs Knight-Service and such other things Edward made a Law that no person religious or any other should buy or sell Lands that might any way come under Mortmain that is in prejudice of the Superior under pain of forfeiture of the same At that time was confusion of Courts the Civil Judges and Bishops endeavoring to enlarge their own and contract their Rivals Authority Edward fixed boundaries unto them both as is more particularly in T. Fuller's Church-History lib. 3. He discharged the Abbot of Waltham and the Dean of Pauls to crave the tithe of any mans goods for the charges of Jerusalems wars albeit the Pope had given them this Commission in three several Bulls The Abbot died and the Dean appeared before the King and his Councel and promised to obey He also summoned the Dean of Wolverhampton because against the priviledges of the Realm he had given a Prebend of his Chappel unto a stranger at the Pope's command The Dean appeared and confessed his fault submitting himself unto the King's clemency K. Iames VI. in Monitio ex archivis Regni 15. Alexander the III. King of Scots fell with his horse over the rocks on the West side of Kingron March 18. An. 1285. His life was remarkable and his death lamentable He had divided the Realm into four parts and abode a quarter of the year in each part giving justice unto all men so he knew his subjects and they knew and loved him The Judges of each part waited upon him within their jurisdiction and when he removed the Judges of the other part received him so his Court was never populous His children died young except one Daughter who was married to Erik King of Norway and she had one Daughter After his much bewailed death a Parliament at Scone named six persons to govern the Country for the time three for the part on the North side of Forth and three for the South The King's Daughter was dead and Edward the I. sent unto this Parliament suing the marriage of their young Queen unto his Son So the Estates consented very readily provision being made that Scotland should be governed by their own Laws and Magistrates In the mean while Margaret died Then competition followed between Robert Bruce Earl of Hastings in England and of Carrict and Garioch in Scotland and John Baliol Earl of Galloway The ground of this plea flowed by their genealogy from King David who died in the year 1153. He had one Son Henry Earl of Huntington he died before his Father leaving three Sons Malcolm William and David So Malcolm surnamed the Maiden succeeded his Grandfather and after him his Brother William the Father of Alexander the II. and Grandfather of this Alexander the III. David the third Son of Henry had three Daughters Margaret Countess of Galloway Isobel married to Robert Bruce surnamed The Noble Earl of Hastings and the third or youngest was Countess of Huntington Margaret had no Sons but three Daughters Dornagilla the Mother of John Baliol and Mary the Wife of John Cumin c. Robert the Noble had a Son Robert the Competitor who married the heretrix of Carrict and had two Sons Robert the King afterwards and Edward Then Dornagilla pleaded first for the Crown but Robert Earl of Carrict alledged that he being of equal degree with her the male should be preferred in the inheritance of Lands and rather of Kingdoms as it hath been lately practised in Burgundy and is usual among Brethren and Sisters as for her Son he is a degree further off and therefore not to be heard in that cause The parties did so increase that no Authority could command either of them and intestin wars were thought dangerous wherefore by common consent Edward the I. was chosen Umpire At the first he omitted no point of formality he called unto Berwick the Competitors John and Robert and the Governors of the Realm he protesteth that he calleth them not as Subjects before their Magistrate but as his Friends before their chosen Arbiter he caused them all to swear that they will stand to his decreet and receive one of the two whom he should name He chose twelve Scots and so many English as his Councellors in that matter and caused them to swear that they shall give their advice uprightly according to their knowledge The mean while he thinketh upon his own advantage and considering that Scotland was divided into two powerful factions it seemed the more easie unto him to work his own point in shew he sendeth for Jurists in other Nations not doubting as that sort is seldom of one opinion but to finde some response conducing to his own end which may appear by his altering the state of the question which he propounded in this maner A King who is not wont to be crowned nor anointed but only set in a chair and be proclaimed King yet not so free that he is not under another King and himself acknowledged so dying without children two of his Cousins and Nephews of his Granduncle Sempronius seek the inheritance c. The most part answered The custom of the Realm is a Law in such a case and if there be not a precedent they should stand at the will of the Superior King Then in another meeting at Norain Edward required acknowledgement of subjection from all the Scotch Commissioners They did all refuse in one voice In a third meeting at Berwick he sent privily for Robert and proferred him the Kingdom if he would swear fealty unto him Robert answered I will never prejudice the liberty of that Realm John Baliol was sent for and accepted the condition So he was proclaimed King six years after the death of Alexander and all the Scots swear Allegiance unto him Afterwards both the King and Nobles gave their
and tokens of bondage and have no Land in Scotland unless they shall dwell in it and if they will not dwell there the Scots should give them for their present possessions 30000 marks of Silver All this time the English were not of one accord for the King followed the counsel of Spencer Earl of Arundel the other Nobility caused the King to banish him but the next year he was restored to the great disturbance of the Kingdom at last they conspire to imprison the King and Hugh Spencer suffered death Tho. Cooper 2. When King Robert came to great age he ordained in Parliament his Successors to wit his Son David a child of eight years old which was espoused to Johanna Daughter of Edward the II. and if he should die without childe he ordained his Son in law Robert Stuart to succeed After he had exhorted the Estates to keep amity and unity he gave them three counsels 1. To beware that the Isles Aebudes be never given unto one man 2. That they never hazzard all their strength in one fight with the English 3. That they make not long truce with them After him Thomas Randolf Earl of Murray was chosen Regent of Scotland he was a good Justiciary and by no means would spare thieves and robbers So that when a Gentleman came from the Pope's Court and thought himself secure because he had obtained the Pope's pardon Thomas caused to apprehend him and said The pardon of sin belongeth unto the Pope but punishment of the body is in the King's hand Buchan lib. 9. 3. An. 1328. Charls the IV. King of France died without children then The title of England unto France Edward the III. King of England his Sisters Son claimeth the Crown of France as nearest Heir The French prefer Philip de Valois the Uncle's Son and they exclude Edward by a Law which they call Salica excluding women from succession At the first when the Estates of France had received Philip Edward did him homage for his Lands in France but when he was denied of a just demand wars began between these two Nations which ceased not altogether until the year 1495. as Tho. Cooper sheweth or rather until the days of Queen Elizabeth for sometimes the French prevailed and sometimes the English even so far as to be crowned at Paris and held Parliaments and had Deputies governing France Sometimes were truce of thirteen years or of ten years but never an absolute peace before Queen Elizabeth In the year 1393. the King of Armenia came into France and shewed how the Turks and Scythians were not only oppressing Hungary but were aiming at the conquest of all Christendom and in the mean time Christians were devouring one another with such words he perswaded both the Kings into a truce for four years Frossard Hist lib. 4. But I leave Civil affairs and return unto the Church 4. In the year 1306. an English Eremite preached at Pauls in London that some Sacraments that were then in use in the Church were not of Christ's institution therefore he was committed to prison Io. Bale ex Io. Baconthorp in Sent. lib. 4. dist 2. q. 1. 5. That John Baconthorp wrote on the Sentences where he followeth the truth in many things especially he refuteth sundry subtilties of Io. Scotus as Baptista Mantuanus hath marked Iste tenebrosi damnat vestigia Scoti Et per sacra novis it documenta viis Hunc habeant quibus est sapientia grata redundat Istius in sacris fontibus omne sophos He wrote de Domino Christi where he proveth that the highest Bishop in every Kingdom should be under Princes Bale Cent. 4. sect 82. 6. Richard Primate of Ireland alias Armachanus was his disciple and taught the same doctrine he translated the Bible into Irish In a Sermon at Paul's Cross in London An. 1356. he said In the estate of innocence none had been a beggar therefore according to that estate unless the law of necessity do press men none desireth nor should be a beggar as neither was Christ willingly a beggar the Law also forbiddeth it Deut. 15. There shall not be a beggar among you He discovered the hypocrisie of Friers in that though they professed poverty yet they had stately houses like the Palaces of Princes and more costly Churches then any Cathedral more richer ornaments then all the Princes more and better books then all the Doctors they had Cloisters and walking places so stately and large that men of Arms might fight on horse-back and encounter one another with their spears in them and their apparel richer then the greatest Prelates These Sermons are extant The next year he appeared before Innocentius the VI. and some of the four Orders of Friers appeared against him and he proved his propositions stoutly and manifestly against them that in many respects they had lest their first rules but saith Walsing in Edwar. III. the English Clergy sent not unto him according to their promises but the Friers wanted not plenty of money and so lite pendente before the cause was decided the Friers obtained a confirmation of their priviledges Armachanus died there at Avenion and was canonized 7. William Ockam was a disciple of Jo. Scotus but he became adversary of his doctrine he was the Author of the Sect of Nominales whereby new occasions of controversies arose to withdraw men from the study of faith He was a follower of Pope Nicolaus the V. and therefore was excommunicated by Pope John Then he thought it more safe to live under the Emperor's protection and he said unto the Emperor Lewis Defend me Caesar from the injury of the Pope by thy sword and I will defend thee by the word by writing and invincible reasons and so they did so long as they lived He wrote a Compendium Errorum of Pope John the XXII and a dialogue between a Clark and a Soldier wherein he handleth these questions 1. Whether Ockam's questions the Pope hath any primacy by right from God 2. Whether Peter had any primacy or was ever Bishop of Rome 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome may err Concerning the Emperor he discusseth 1. Whether one man may discharge the offices both of Priest and Emperor 2. Whether the Emperor hath his power from God only or from the Pope also 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome have any power from Christ to commit any jurisdiction unto Caesar and to other Princes 4. Whether Caesar after his election hath power to rule the Republick 5. Whether Kings anointed by a Bishop receive any power from him 6. Whether these Kings be any way subject unto their anointer 7. Whether the seven Electors give as great authority unto the elected Caesar as succession giveth unto other Princes c. All which he disputeth on both sides and concludeth always against the Extravagants He wrote also against Pope Clemens and calleth him an Heretick the Antichrist an hater of Christian poverty a foe of the Common-wealth an
bodily pains in this world which after their own sayings are far less and the Pope may go down to hell as another man and whereas he taketh upon him to absolve any man without inward repentance he extolleth himself above God This complaint is at length in the Act. Monim written by Io. Fox and these are the chief heads of it 11. In the twenty fifth year of King Edward the III. which was 1364. Laws against the power of the Pope Statutes were made If any procured from Rome a provision to any Abbey Priory or Benefice in England which is said to be in destruction of the Realm and holy Religion or if any man sued out of the Court of Rome any process or procured any personal citation upon causes whose cognifance and final discussion pertaineth to the King's Court these shall be out of the King's protection and their lands goods and cattels shall be forfeited unto the King The narrative of the Act sheweth the cause of it and the King and Commons of the Realm had oft complained that his Realms were impoverished by the Pope giving Benefices to strangers which never dwelt in England the King and Nobility were robbed of their right of patronage the cure was not served and the will of the first founders was not followed The King had oft complained but in vain therefore he resolved to make his Kingdom free from this bondage Morn in Myster pag. 480. sheweth that when Pope Gregory the XI heard of it he cried This enterprise is a renting of the Church a destroying of Religion and usurpation of his right and priviledge Wherefore he sent immediately unto Edward requiring him to annul these Acts. But when the Schism arose no Pope did insist in it until Pope Martin the V. sent more sharp Letters unto King Henry the VI. And he answered An Act of Parliament cannot be annulled but by another Parliament and he would assemble a Parliament within a short space for the same cause but he did it not saith Pol. Virg. Hist lib. 19. In the thirteeth year of Richard the II. this Act was revived in these words If any person within or without the Realm shall seek from the Court of Rome preferment to any Benefice of Cure or without Cure the preferment shall be null and the person shall be banished and his goods shall appertain unto the King and the same punishment shall strike against them which receive or entertain any such person As also it was ordained If any person shall bring or send any summons sentence or excommunication or if any shall make execution of any such summons sentence or excommunication against any person whatsoever shall forfeit all his lands and goods for ever and himself shall be imprisoned and incur the pain of death yea although such a person had obtained the King's licence for petitioning at the Court of Rome he shall sorfeit a years rent It is also observed that before the year 1367. the high offices in England Offices of State as the Lord Chancellor the Lord Treasurer the Lord Privy Seal c. were wont to be for the most part in the hands of the Clergy as also in Scotland until the Reformation but about that time the English Nobility procured that all these offices should be given unto temporal Lords 12. At that time God raised up John Wickliff a couragious witness of Iohn Wickliff truth he was Fellow of Merton Colledge and Master of Baliol Colledge in Oxford and Reader of Divinity there about the year 1370. He began first to oppose in questions of Logick and Metaphysick but such as strawed the way to other things which he intended When he set upon controversies of Divinity he protested publickly in the Schools that his aim was to bring the Church from Idolatry to some amendment In his book entituled The path-way to perfect knowledge near the end he sheweth what travel he had in translating the Bible into English he gathered many old Latine Bibles for saith he the late books are very corrupt and he conferred the translations with the ancient Doctors and common Glosses and especially he was helped by the late translation of Lyra in the old Testament and the fourth time he employed many cunning men at the correcting of his fourth translation Then he wrote that book which I have now named wherein he giveth the sum of every book of the old Testament with some general and useful observations He reckoneth the books according to the Hebrew and sheweth also some use of the Apocrypha for examples of piety patience constancy c. and denieth that they are for proof of faith In chap. 2. he saith The truth of the Gospel sufficeth to salvation without keeping the ceremonies made of God in the old Law and much more without keeping the ceremonies of sinful and unknowing men that have been made in time of Antichrist and unbinding of Satan as it is Apocal. 20. and he calleth it heresie to say otherwise In chap. 1. he saith Christian men and women old and yong should study fast in the new Testament for it is of full authority and open to the understanding of simple men as to the points that be most needful to salvation and the same sentence in the darkest places of holy writ is both open and dark which sentence is in the open places and each place of holy writ both open and dark teacheth humility and charity and therefore he that keepeth humility and charity hath the true understanding and perfection of all holy writ as Augustine proveth in his Sermon of praising charity therefore no simple man of wit should be feared unmeasurably to study the text of holy writ for they are the words of everlasting life as Peter said to Christ Iohn 6. and the holy Ghost stirred holy men to speak and write the words of holy writ for the comfort and salvation of meek Christian men as Peter in his Epistles and Paul Rom. 15. witness And no Clark should be proud of the very understanding of holy writ for that very understanding without charity which keepeth God's hests maketh a man deeper damned as Christ Jesus and James witness and the pride and covetousness of Clarks is the cause of their blindeness and heresie In chap. 10. Though Kings and Lords knew no more of holy writ then three stories of 2 Chron. that is of Jehoshaphat Hezekiah and Josiah they might learn sufficiently to live well and govern their people well by God's Law and eschew all pride and idolatry and other sins But alas alas alas whereas King Jehoshaphat sent his Princes Deacons and Priests to each City of his Realm with the Book of God's Law to teach openly God's Law unto the people ..... some Christian Lords send general Letters unto all their Ministers and Liege-men that the pardons of the Bishop of Rome which are open lies for they grant many hundred years of pardons after doomsday be preached generally in their Realms
the Bohemians would have submitted for they sent unto the Emperour in Moravia to seek peace and the Emperour condescended unto tolerable conditions all the people were joifull under hope of peace and liberty of religion God would have it otherwise that his good mettle might shine and be better known unto the world Sigismund would first punish some offences committed in Vratislavia against his Governours and was severe against the chief of the rebellion This news coming to Prague did so affright the people that they were afraid of the like rigour and resolving to refuse the Emperour writ their Letters through all the Kingdom as if the Emperour intended the like cruelty amongst them Aene. Sylvius ibid. cap. 39. All the people with uniform consent put Cisca into Prague for their defence against Sigismund An. 1421. Whereupon followed eleven battels or rather preparations described loc cit cap. 44. c. Cisca was alwaies victorious Unless their enemy had written so it were almost incredible The most notable were these Sigismund came to Prague and besieged it six weeks All that space Cisca and his Bohemians had the better in every skirmish and the like was in other parts of the Kingdom The Emperour was forced to break up from Prague and to go unto Cutua Then Cisca left the City and joined with the Tabbrites so named from a Town which they had founded at that time and not being contented with victory in defence he took some Towns and Castles from the Imperialists Then the Emperour went against a Monastery which held as a Castle for Cisca nothing doubting to carry it his Army was so numerous Cisca came unto their relief and the Imperialists at the only sight of their adversaries were so far from opposing that they ran away suddenly and the Emperour durst not stay in any part of all Bohemia So Cisca took more Towns and Castles Before the Town Rabi his one eye was pierced with an Arrow but his reputation was such that he continued in his government and that Army was led by a blind man a thing never seen nor read in any other History saith Sylvius ibid. The Emperour levied another Army and sent for the Elector Princes then came the Bishop of Mentz the Count Palatine some Dukes of Saxony the Marquess of Brandenburg and other Bishops of Germany the Emperour ordered them to enter with their forces into Bohemia on the West and he with his Hungars did enter on the East Blind Cisca goeth to the fields and when he was ready to join in fight the Imperialists were so amazed that they were soon overthrown and some principal men amongst them were slain Cisca followed his Victory one day and brought back rich spoil A Florentine leading 15000. Horse and Foot fell among ice and many of them were drowned The Bohemians being so victorious would chuse a King to resist the Emperour they sent and invited Vitold Duke of Lituania he was glad to be a King Cisca was no less discontented and accepted and within a short space resigned his Title unto the Emperour who returned against the Hussites Cisca is still victorious and 9000. Imperialists were slain Now Sigismund thinks he cannot be King of Bohemia without the good will of Cisca and that age saw the Emperour whose name barbarous Nations did fear and all Europe did reverence make supplications and prayers unto an old blind Heretick as Sylvius speaks Cap. 46. But saith he whom man could not overcome the finger of God did kill He should rather have said Whose weakness was strengthned by the power of God against the malice of men he could not be undone by craft not power of men for Cisca in his old age was willing to hearken and to bring the Bohemians under the command of the Emperour and so under the yoke of the Pope but God's appointed time was not yet come and he would not suffer the Treaty to be closed nor will leave his people howbeit they then in despair call themselves Orphans After the death of Cisca they were divided into two factions and led by two Captains Procopius the elder and the younger All these circumstances gave some courage unto Pope Martin he sent a Cardinal the Bishop of Winchester in England unto the Emperour with a charge to renew his forces against the Bohemians and sign the Germans with the Cross An. 1427. three Armies were levied from the Sea Coast went the Duke of Saxony the Marquess of Brandenburg from Franconia and the third from Rhine Bavier and Suevia under the Conduct of Otho Bishop of Trevers These entred three waies into Bohemia and joined together when they heard the Bohemians were approaching a thing most strange yet reported as true by Sylvius cap 48. they were so terrified that without seeing the enemy both Captains and Souldiers without shame abandoned the Fields and ran away The Hussits pursued and got all the Baggage and Artillery and not being contented they sally out of the Kingdom and return with rich spoil The Legate accused his crossed Souldiers of so base cowardize and exhorted them to turn their faces against the vile Hereticks nevertheless they ceased not to flie untill the Victors left pursuing Ibid. At that time were wars also between Millain and Florence and between the French and Spaniards in Naples But Pope Martin not being satisfied with so much spilt blood sent another Legate Julian Cardinal of St. Angelo to perswade the Germans to assume the cross once more against the Bohemians An. 1430. The Bohemians by their Letters sent abroad did lament that so many men were slain through the deceitful malice of the Pope who like to Satan was rich in promises unto them which would fight against innocent people but is not able to perform who is not ashamed to proclaim lyes and slander them as miscreants and hereticks and refuseth to fight with the weapons of God's word because he knoweth his own heresies will be disclosed but truth is never afraid of falshood and is mightiest of all things but he deceiveth both in body and soul all that believe him And they intreated all men both rich and poor for God's sake and for righteousness that they would by some means procure a safe and friendly communing at some convenient place and bring their teachers with them that they may hear one another and the party erring may be brought to acknowledge their error and not destroy one another blindely which if those whom they implore will refuse to do on the other side they will take the Lord to be their help and will defend the truth unto death nor will they be afraid of the Pope's curse who is not God as he maketh himself and these many years hath accursed them but God hath been their help by his gracious blessing c. Ph. Mornay in Myster Nevertheless the Marquess of Brandenburg is chosen General of another Army He and the Dukes of Saxony and Bavier three Bishops Electors with others to the number of
40000. horse and not so many foot went against Bohemia The Cardinal went along with them Where they came they spared neither age nor sex and no man considering their number and apparent power doubted of their victory But when the Bohemians came near them a voice went among the Imperialists that they should stay no longer none knew whence the voice was a suddain fear caused them to flie Julian ran unto the Dukes and Commanders exhorting them to fight not for possessions or worldly glory but for Religion Christ's honor and the salvation of souls Aen. Sylv. ibid. but fear was more perswasive that they left their colours weapons and all that they had An. 1431. At that time the Emperor was at Noremberg and determined to deal no more with them by Arms but would provide against them in the Councel at Basil and the Legate Julian went thither Many other broils were in the Churches of Germany at that time as Crantz in Saxo. lib. 11. cap. 25. sheweth For the Bishop of Magdeburg and his Clergy were exiled the Church of Trevers was divided between two Competitors fighting and both accursed and both in contempt of the keys did their office the Church of Mentz had controversie with the Citizens casting out their former Senate and chusing another so that the Clergy were forced to leave the City the Church of Bamberg was in the same condition the Church of Utrecht after Sweder's death had contention for a new Bishop nor could Pope Eugenius and his Cardinals go safely from Rome to Basil but were all plundered by the way even to the skin ibid. The next year Sigismund went to Rome to be crowned but not with such equipage nor so looked upon as others were before The Bohemians sent Procopius the elder and some others to Basil but the Nobles would not be content to be ruled by the two Procopii for they were suspicious of them as hearkning too much unto the Councel nor was their opinion vain saith Aen. Sylv. cap. 51. Mainard was the Author of this mutiny They assembled in Parliament and chose Alscio a Nobleman of small estate to be their Governor but all was done as Mainard would Sigismund after his coronation came to Basil where he heard some controversies decided then he came to Ulme where he understood that a battel had been fought in Bohemia and the old Commanders were slain and the faction of the Nobility were prevailing then Sigismund sent unto Bohemia requiring them in a quiet manner to accept him their King according to his right Mainard had privy correspondence with Sigismund he called all the Soldiers into hovels or barns whereof many are there pretending that he was to march against the Lands of the Emperor and he would give them in these barns wages for the expedition but he shut the doors upon them and burnt them all and then he brought the rest of the Countrey under the Emperor's command Aen. Sylv. cap. 51. The Emperor entered into Bohemia An. 1436. with great solemnity then Images were restored Altars were repaired and Monks returned into their Cloisters some Hussites fled out of the Countrey a time of recantation was granted unto others and the most bold among them were punished But Sigismund could not prevail as he would for they preached against the Monks and doctrine of Rome and followed their former order in their Churches and were rising in Arms against Sigismund ibid. cap. 52. But he died the next year leaving only one Daughter which was married to Albert Marquess of Moravia and now by marriage Successor of the Kingdom of Hungary Sigismund had dealt with John Paleologus Emperor of the Greeks to make an union with the Latines in matters of Religion and thereby he might have aid against the Turks and likewise through weakness of German Princes he might be chosen Emperor such motives were prevalent but when he was upon his way he heard that the Emperor was dead and he began even then to repent of his voyage When the Princes Electors did conveen Pope Eugenius and the Councel of Basil sent their Legates craving to delay the election until the affairs of the Church were setled The Electors said The condition of the Empire cannot permit a delay Therefore the Orators of both parties did threaten the Electors with their curse The Electors did appeal from them and their curse unto the general Councel that should be next and lawfully called so they went on 3. ALBERT the II. Marquess of Moravia was chosen unanimously and was gracious unto all Germany for he was learned wise and stout The Bohemians which before had fought for Religion sent unto Casimire Brother of the King of Poland and he was willing to accept the Kingdom but was hindered by Albert nevertheless the Bohemians and Silesians continued in a warlike posture Aen. Sylv. cap. 55. Albert punished the Jews for pertinacy in their Rites He heard that Amurathes the II. was entered into Servia and was intending to invade Hungary therefore when he had dealt with the two Anti-Councels for unity he went against the Turks Amurathes hearing of his preparation returned into Macedonia and Thessalie subduing all where he came Albert dismissed his Army and died in Hungary An. 1439. John Emperor of the Greeks conceived hopes of aid in Italy and arriving at Venice made choise to seek the aid of the Pope rather then of the Councel at Basil but at last his experience taught him that the Pope was seeking but to inlarge his own power and so having almost begged his bread in Italy the space of two years he returned with no satisfaction and having heard the scoffings of some by the way he had no grace among his people and was forced to quit his Crown in favor of his Brother Constantine 4. FREDERICK the III. Duke of Austria was chosen Ianuary 1. An. 1440. in the 25. year of his age and reigned 53. years Albert had two Daughters and left his Wife big with childe The Hungarians sent unto Vladislaus King of Poland to accept their Crown but when their Queen brought forth a Son Ladislaus they crowned him in the fourth moneth of his age His Mother sent him unto his Uncle the Emperor to be brought up by him The Hungarians thought it not expedient to want a King in time of such danger therefore they followed their first purpose and brought in Vladislaus He once put Amurathes to flight that Amurathes sought peace and the King mistrusting his own strength consented unto peace for ten years They both confirmed the peace and conditions by solemn oath after their several maner but as it is said of Eugenius the oath was violated and the King was killed in the fourth year by the Turks Then the Bohemians would chuse another King The Queen did advertise them of the birth and title of her Son and some did accord But in open Parliament by consent of the most Albert Duke of Bavier was chosen King Albert refused saying He would not
this Jerome who told him to his face that God had hitherto convoyed him but because he had not reformed the Church as he should have done and had not hindered his Soldiers from violence and rapine he should shortly suffer dammage but if yet he would repent and punish his Subjects according to their demerits and would tenderly help the oppressed God would shew mercy upon him Ph. Comin de bello Neapol lib. 3. He said also Charls shall come back into Italy and perform the work that God had appointed unto him or then most grievous plagues were hanging over his head and he writ the same unto King Charls and advertised him that if he return not to amend his omissions his Son shall die shortly and himself shall not live long after him The Florentines did expect his returning and would not partake in the league against France and others contemned the man as an Heretick and worthy to be cast into the river but he was so reverenced that none attempted any thing against him even although the Pope and Duke of Millain had by Letters dealt earnestly with the Florentines to put him to death and on that condition they promised to restore unto Florence the Towns that were taken from them Charls would not return into Italy but intended to reform the Realm and Church of France Then as it was foretold his Son died and himself was smitten with an apoplexy he recovered a little and called upon God and Mary and the Saints Claudius and Blasius and within nine hours he died After that the adversaries of Savonorola stirred up the people against him and vexed him grievously and slew his dearest companion Francis Valoris When the Pope heard of this he sent a Legate unto Florence and gave them liberty to judge him So he was examined with tortures saith Guicciardin Hist lib. 3. for speaking against the Clergy and Court of Rome Upon this examination a Process was published to this purpose That he was not moved thereunto out of any evil intent but this one thing he only respected that a General Councel might be called whereby the corrupt manners of the Clergy might be reformed and the degenerate estate of the Church so far as was possible might be reduced to that that was in time of the Apostles or those that were nearest unto them and if he could bring so profitable a work to effect he would think it a greater glory then to obtain the Popedom it self So Savonorola and Silvester a Dominican and Dominicus de Pisis a Franciscan which took part with him were burnt in the year 1499. Ph. Comin lib. 5. 41. Tileman Spangerberg the Father of John Spangerberg said unto his Sons and Neighbors This Religion shall shortly be despised and ye shall see the Priests and Monks cast out of the Churches and Cloisters contemptibly for their wickedness especially for their avarice and filthiness and ye will see a reformation of the Church for God will not suffer the abominable vices of these men since they teach not a word of the Gospel and their conversation is worse then heathenish And he said unto some Canons ye are called spiritual men and should teach the people but ye do far otherwise ye do what ye should hinder others from doing ye are authors of wars who should exhort others unto peace ye should save mens souls and ye destroy both souls and bodies At that time the Bishop of Hildissheim had wars with the Duke of Brunswick He died in the year 1499. Catalog test verit lib. 19. 42. Santes Pagnine a Dominican of Luca deserveth to be remembred at that time he Translated the Old Testament out of the Hebrew and left the old Latine Translation in many places cleaving unto the Original In his Thesaurus or Hebrew Dictionary he not only cleareth the signification of the words but declareth many dark sentences by conferring them with parallel texts and out of the Commentaries of the Rabbines 43. We have heard that from time to time the Empire of the Turks Of the Turks hath waxed through dissension of Christians and that it was seldom or little hindred by them After the death of mighty Tamerlane in January 1402. the Turks did prevail powerfully until the year 1460. when the valiant Scanderberg of the Countrey of old Achilles stayed their usurpation some years We touched before how Constantinople was lost in the year 1453. it is lamentable to hear or read the merciless cruelties of these Infidels against the Citizens without respect of sex or age as they are written by the Greeks The Emperour Constantine died in the crowd as they were flying out the enemy cut off his head and carried it on a spear through their Camps in token of their Triumph so did they with a Cross crying Here is the God of the Christians So from time to time the Church hath little rest on Earth partly being vexed by Heathenish Emperours partly by the proud Popes and partly by the cruel Turks These have been the three capital enemies of the Church whose malice hath been so great against God's people and it is hard to judge which of them hath exceeded in cruelty but for number and continuance of mischiefs the Turk surmounteth the others even so far that neither can a History be so perfect nor Writers so diligent and far less can this Compend express their manifold cruelties But for a general view consider what Dominions how many Countries Kingdoms and Provinces they have taken from Christians The yearly Revenues of their Emperour are reckoned 800●000 or eight millions of golden crowns whereof two millions is lai●d up in treasure and the rest is for the entertainment of his family and servants Cumin Ventura in Thesoro polit Laon. Chalcocondylas an Athenian de reb Turc lib. 8. hath his Revenues in this manner his Tribute out of Europe is 90. Myriades aureor staterum of which no Turk paieth a penny for it is not lawfull that a Turk pay Tribute Mahumet the II. did first exact the Tithe of handy-work which the Governors of Towns must bring up and that is given to the Janizaries the flocks of Sheep pay a Tribute unto the Janizars also Moreover thirty millions of golden crowns is gathered ftom and for Horse Mules Camels and Oxen through Europe and Asia He sheweth other particulars and in the end he gives the sum 400. millions besides 20. millions which the Governors and Dukes must pay yearly in the Spring by way of gift and the Revenues of Princes Dukes and Timarati are valued to nine hundred millions all paied by Christians at that time The bounds of the Turks are from Dalmatia on the East-side of the Venetian Gulf unto Thracia the space of 1500. Italian miles and from the Euxine Sea unto Nilus and from thence unto the Strait and in Asia East ward unto Persia In Europe the Princes of Transilvania Bodogamia and Valachia are his Tributaries and he hath all the Provinces on both sides of
Pope Gregory the XII did direct a Bull to Oxford against the Wiclevists and there he saith They did follow the doctrine of Marsilius of Padua and John of Ganduin There he mentioneth a Provincial Councel held at Oxford and sharp inquiry decreed by the above named Thomas against all even the heads of Colledges and Halls and others suspected of Lollardy They might very well suppose saith he that the Students of that place were also entertainers of the aforesaid doctrine since about that very time in the Margine is Anno 1406. October the 5. a testimonial was given in the Congregation-House under seal in savor of John Wickliff where these words are God forbid that our Prelates should have condemned a man of such honesty for an Heretick c. By this testimonial it appeareth that the fire could not consume the truth In time of the same King Henry many propositions were published upon occasion of the schism between the Antipopes arguing that the Pope should be subject unto Laws Censures and Councels And the King wrote unto Pope Gregory the XII An. 1409. thus Most blessed Father if the most discreet providence of the Apostolick See would call to minde with what perils the universal world hath been damnified hitherto under pretence of this present schism and especially what slaughter of Christian people to the number of 200000. as some say hath been thorow the world and lately 30000. were slain for the Bishoprick of Leodium by two Antibishops set up against one another by two Popes certainly you would lament in spirit and be grieved for the same so that with good conscience you would relinquish the honour of the Apostolick See rather then suffer so horrible blood-shed hereafter to insue following the example of the true Mother who pleading before Solomon for the right of her Childe would rather part from the Childe then the Childe should be parted with a sword c. 2. In the year 1407. James Resby was burnt at Glascow for saying The Pope is not the Vicar of Christ and A man of wicked life should not be acknowledged for Pope About the year 1411. was the beginning of the University of St. Andrew's not so much for publick or private addoting of revenues as by voluntary profession of learned men In the year 1416. the Abbot of Pontiniak was sent Legate from the Councel of Constance into Scotland and Pope Benedict sent Henry Hardin an English Franciscan to perswade Robert Governor of Scotland in time of the captivity of King James the I. he was taken by the English when he was sailing into France unto their adherence The Governor consented unto Benedict but all the Clergy received Pope Martin and followed the authority of the Councel Buchan 3. In the year 1412. the Commons of England presented a Bill petitioning King Henry to take the temporal lands from the spiritual men so were the Monks named because the temporalities were disorderly wasted by them and might suffice to entertain unto the King 15. Earls 1500. Knights 6200. Esquires 100. Alms Houses for the Poor and 20000. l. to the King's Exchequer so that every Earl shall have 3000. Marks yearly every Knight have 100. M. and four plow-lands every Esquire have 40. M. and two plow-lands and each Alms-House 100. M. with the oversight of two secular men unto each House all English money Unto this Bill no answer was made Tho. Cooper In the year 1414. Thomas Arundel Bishop of Canterbury put to death and martyrdom in January these persons Sir Robert Actoun Mr. John Brown John Beverley with 36. more and in March following he was so plagued in his tongue that some days before his death he could neither eat nor drink nor speak many said It was justly done unto him because he had tied the truth that it should not be preached M. Fox ex Tho. Gascoin Unto him succeeded Henry Chicesley who sate 25. years and was no less an adversary against the followers of truth As the Preachers were increased the stricter inquisition was made some were burnt some fled and some abjured Among those that were burnt was John Claydon a Currier in London and Richard Turning both in one fire at Smithfield An. 1415. and 36. at Thickethfield Here Sir John Oldcastle Lord Cobham deserveth peculiar remembrance for his godliness and warlike courage about the year 1413. he was called The Protector of the Lollords When he was committed unto the Tower he gave in writing unto the Arch-Bishop a confession of his faith the Arch-Bishop read it and said It contained many good and Catholick points but he must satisfie them in other heads as concerning Transubstantiation the Sacrament of Pennance the worship of Images the power of the Keys the power of the Pope and Roman Hierarchy Sir John was so far from giving satisfaction in these heads that he said plainly The Pope is the Antichrist the Arch-Bishop and other Prelates are the members of the Antichrist and the Friers are his tail and the usual determination of these other points is contrary unto Scripture and was devised since poison was infused into the Church and not before For these answers the Arch-Bishop condemned him of heresie and ordained him to be punished But the King loved him and caused the execution to be delayed In the mean time Sir John escaped out of the Tower and then a great multitude joyned with him trusting to be free of danger but many both Priests and others were condemned to the fire and would not recant P. Morn in Myster ex Walsing and he shews ex Io. Copgra lib. 2. de Nobilib Henr. that Sir John Oldcastle said in a Parliament England will never be in peace until the authority of the Pope be sent over the Sea He was a learned and eloquent man and published sundry Treatises against invocation of Saints auricular confession the single life of Priests and other errors then waxing Wherefore he was apprehended and brought again to London he was first hanged as if he had been a Traitor and then burnt as an Heretick An. 1417. Io. Fox hath his story at great length in Act. Mon. If we will believe Walsingham at that time were in England 100000. persons professing the same doctrine King Henry the V. writ to Pope Martin An. 1422. there were so many infected with the Heresies of Wickliff that without the force of an Army they could not be suppressed Neither yet left he off to make strict Acts against them under the name of Lollards that they should be punished as Felons and Traitors and so were they pursued Nevertheless many endured the heat of the fire for worshipping God alone for denying the Pope's usurped power for maintaining the lawfulness of communicating in both elements c. Among these are numbred Laurence Redman Master of Arts John Aschwarby Vicar of St. Maries in Oxford William James who is called an excellently well learned young man Thomas Brightwel William Haulam a Civilian Ralph Greenhurst c. Among
those which fled was Peter Pain who had been a hearer of Wickliff and then went into Bohemia and was sent unto the Councel of Basil where he argued for partaking of both elements and against the Civil Power of the Clergy William White being examined before William Bishop of Norwich An. 1428. did hold as he had also written that by Law Marriage was granted unto all persons of the militant Church but the Pope who is the Antichrist and his Counsellors which are the Clarks of Lucifer have abolished this Law to the undoing of the Priesthood after the loosing of Satan that is after the 1000. years from the incarnation Anno 3. of Henry the V. the Act was renewed against presentations unto Benefices to be purchased from the Pope but under colour of prejudice to the Incumbents in going so far for them but by this Act all presentations from the Pope were annulled An. 1439. under King Henry the VI. Richard Wiche was burnt the next year Eleanora Cobham Dutchess of Glocester was condemned to perpetual imprisonment in the Isle of Man and Robert only a Priest was condemned to death Philip Morice was excommunicated by Pope Eugenius and he appealed unto the General Councel 4. Richard King of England had made Truce with France for 30. years Troubles between France and England these being expired Henry the V. sent unto Charls the VII King of France An. 1415. claiming the Crown of France So Wars began Henry conquered a great part of France In the year 1419. Charls did dis-inherit his son Lewis and then the Kingdom was divided some cleaving unto Lewis who at that time was called King of Vierron because he lived there in Berry Charls agreed with Henry that Henry should take to wife the daughter of Charls and be proclaimed Regent of France and both should keep what they have and after the death of Charls the Crown of France shall remain with Henry and his heirs and that Henry with the Duke of Burgundy should pursue Lewis the Dolphin as an enemy of the Common-Wealth These two Kings died in one year Charls died first and Henry because his son was but eight moneths old ordained his brother Humphrey Duke of Glocester to be Protector of England and the Dukes of Bedford and Burgundy Protectors of France These two had continual Wars with Lewis Henry the VI. was Crowned King of England in the eighth year of his age and at Paris he was Crowned King of France in the tenth year of his age An. 1431. Five years thereafter the Duke of Bedford died and the Duke of Burgundy became an enemy to England then all things in France went backward from England but no cessation of wars untill the year 1475. when King Edward the IV. invaded France and then Truce was made for seven years at that time Lewis gave unto Edward 75000. crowns and 50000. crowns yearly during the Truce Henry the VII renewed the old claim An. 1487. Peace was made An. 1492. on condition that Charls should pay presently a great sum of money and then yearly 25000. crowns in the name of Tribute Tho. Cooper 5. At Saint Andrews Paul Craw was accused An. 1431. for following John Wickliff and Huss namely for denying that the substance of the Bread and Wine is changed or that confession is necessary to be made unto Priests or praiers unto Saints departed When he was condemned they did put a Bull of Brass in his mouth to the end he should not speak unto the people or they should not know for what he was burnt King James the I. then did set himself to reform the abuses that had crept into the Realm under the Reign of Robert the III. and his own captivity in England he made Laws against the disturbers of the common peace and against them who ride with more men then their yearly Revenues may sustain he punished Robbers and Rebels He considered the Clergy and saw that Benefices were not bestowed on learned men but as rewards done unto the Pope or a Bishop And he saw Monks abounding in wealth and more mindfull of their bellies than of books and the Churches served by some begging Friers which were hired by the Titulars to preach now and then and the Beneficed men did never see their Parishes unless it were to crave their Tithes When the King did publickly rebuke such enormities the Bishops answered and the Friers preached Church-men should be left unto the Pope and to God neither are they obliged to answer unto any prophane Magistrate When he could A glimps● of Reformation not amend the present possessours he would provide for the time to come At Saint Andrews he founded some Schools to be Seminaries of all Estates and to the end the Schools should be had in the greater estimation he honoured the Masters with competent maintenance and their meetings and disputes with his Royal presence He gave strict command that the Masters should recommend unto him the most diligent and worthiest Disciples on whom he might bestow the vaking Benefices and he had alwaies by him a role of the recommended Students Likewise he turbed the Monasteries and said King David who erected so many Monasteries was a good Saint to the Church but an ill Saint to the Crown Buchan lib. 10. With consent of all the Estates he made an Act that all the Subjects should be ruled by the King's Laws only In Parliam 3. and if any did fly or appeal from the King's judgment he should be accounted a Rebel and punished accordingly In Parliam 8. James Kennedy Bishop of Saint Andrews was then exemplary he caused all Parsons and Vicars to dwell at their Parish Churches for preaching the Word of God unto their people and to visit them especially in time of sickness He indeavoured to visit all the Parishes within his Diocy four times in the year and inquired in every Parish if they were duly instructed by their Parson or Vicar and if the Sacraments were duly administred if the poor were helped and the young ones instructed in the grounds of Religion Where he found not this order observed he punished the Delinquents severely to the end God's glory might shine throughout his Diocy Ex M. S. histor in Biblioth Edimb 6. James the III. King of Scotland ordained by Act of Parliament An. 1466. that no Commenda old or new should have place within the Realm and that none shall purchase nor accept any Commenda under pain of rebellion otherwise then for the space of six moneths And that no Pension new or old of any Benefice Secular or Religious be sought nor accepted from any person without or within the Realm under the same pain James the III. Parlia 1. Hence we may guess at the abuses of Commendaes and Pensions out of Benefices as certainly complaints have been made at that time against them Here by the way the Reader may inquire what a Of Commenda Commenda is and how it began This we may
Patavium c. and unto the Pope Arimino Faventia Cervia Ravenna c. and he reserveth unto himself their part of Lombardy So the Dominion of the Venetians was sore weakned and never of such power again howbeit by their power they have recovered what was given unto Maximilian Pope Iulius was the first who forsook the League when he had such towns he feared that if the Venetians were brought to ruine his own estate might be in danger for the Colledge have special care that none be of greater power than the Pope Wherefore Julius made peace with Venice as is hinted before Because John King of Navar did aid King Lewes the Pope knowing that Navar at that time was in a manner dis-peopled gave it unto Ferdinand who did invade it albeit he had married his Brothers Daughter he took Pompejopolis and the Spanish keep a great part of that Kingdom until this time About the years 1512. Maximilian made league with Henry VIII King of England and they both invade France and in severall parts prevaile The Emperour was drawn back to appease a debate twixt the Ecclesiastical and seculare Estates he was advised to restrain the avarice of Church-men and in the Diaet at Trevers they consult how Pluraelity of Benefices discharged by the Emp. A coat without a seam drunkennes and common swearing should be punished but these two grievous sins could not be rooted up saith Osiander in Epit. Hist. Cent. 16. libr. 1. Cap. 16. Nevertheless by Imperiall authority the plurality of Benefices was for bidden Fasci rer expetend Pag. 170. In time of that Diaet in presence of the Emperour and all the Princes was opened the altar of the great Church of S. Peter there in was found a coat without a seam and that was called Christs coat Some said it was but a device to delude the Emperour and the Princes and to conciliate some authority unto the Church and that See saith Osiand loc cit The same yeare was another tumult at Spira the Commons rose against the Senate because they were burdened with so many taxes they thrust out the Counsellers and set up another Counsell and took the keies of the town into their own power The Emperour interponed his authority and establishes the Senate At that time Lewes XII made peace with England and marryed Marie Sister of King Henry VIII concluded peace with the Venetians by the meanes of two Senatours whom hee had captives Then Francis I. perceiving that the Emperour in his olde age was inclined to peace entred upon the Dutchie of Millain and fought with the Duke till night they stood both in arms all the night in the morning the King carried it and shortly had possession of Millain An. 1515. The same yeare Ferdinand King of Castile died at Madril and left Charls then 15 years olde his successour so the many Kingdoms of Spain were united Maximilian was making readie to goe and recover Millain and was hindered by the death of Ladislaus King of Hungary and Bohem Whose young son was espoused to the Emperours Daughter He appeased the tumults there made peace with France and employed the rest of his time in ministration of justice and reforming some abuses and confusions of the Empire untill the year 15●9 when he died He was a Prince abounding in vertues and so bountifull that if he had been Lord of all the revenues of the earth he never wold have had treasure so couragious that he could not be timorous of singulare sagacity and judgement yet would alwayes ask counsell of them who loved him and were able to advise he loved learning and was liberal toward them who were expert in the liberall sciences Pet. mexia Then all the Electours made choise of Frederik Duke of Saxony but he would not accept it saith Erasm in Epist. Roffensi Episc dated An. 1519. CHAP. III. Of DIVERSE COVNTRIES RAymond Cardinal S Mariae Novae and Bishop of Curca was sent Legate The selling of indulgences and the account of them by Pope Alexander VI. into Germany in the year 1501. and from thence into Dacia Suecia and Prussia with power to sell Indulgences unto all which had not been in Rome at the Jubilee The Emperour and the Princes hearing of his earand sent unto him when he was at Trent and forbade him to come into Germany without doubt perceiving that it was but a cunning trick to squeeze moneys out of the Country Nevertheless after some M●ssives sent to and fro he came unto the Emperour and then to Norenbergh and from thence to Mentz and then more Northward and leaveth abundance of these indulgences printed on parchement to be sold before his return Nic. Besel in Addit Naucler telleth of his coming and how he obtained liberty but he speaks not of his account But Orth. Gratius in Epistol ad Lector before the works of Petr. de Aliaco helpeth saying When Raymond returned with vast sums of money the Colledge of the Cardinals asked him Whath said the Barbarians when these wares of indulgences were sent unto them He answereth All the World so for as I have been complain of the prodigality of Cardinals and certanly if they see you not amended our Republick will bee in danger They frown on him and his friends said He should not speake of Reformation which is an odious purpose at Rome 2. Many tricks did the Friers devise to delude the World for example I Iugleries of Friers wil name but one At Berna in the year 1507. the Dominicanes think what way to ingratiat themselves unto the people and be preferred unto the Franciscanes and so might draw the oblations of the people unto themselves They cause one who was lately entred among them believe that S. Marie and S. Barbara and S. Catharin of Siena did appear and speak unto him and brought unto him the Hostie or Eucharist bleeding as the very blood of Christ and commanded him to goe unto the Senate of the town and report such and such things especially that the blessed Virgine was conceived in sin and the Franciscanes as liars should not be suffered in the town and neverthelesse the image of the blessed Virgine should be worshipped As also they made an image of the Virgine with a device to drop as it were weeping tears The thing was belleved as truth that red-coloured water was adored as if it had been Christs blood and drops of it sent hither and thiter as a rare and precious gift lykewise was great concourse of people to see their Ladie weeping Thus the Dominicanes were thought the only men for the space of three or four years The Franciscanes had used such jugleries before and for respect to them selves were loath to bewray it but at last they sought it and revealed it all Then the Provinciall and three other Dominicanes were taken and burnt An. 1509 when the deceivers were tortured they confessed other jugleries but the Popes Legate would not suffer them be divulged T is historie is
for the remission of sins This profession of our faith is confirmed by the words of Christ which are written by the Evangelists and Holy Paul Unto this profession may be added this body of Christ and his blood should according to the institution of Christ and his Church should be taken in both kindes of bread wine in remembrance of his death and of his blood shed as he said Doe this in remembrance of mee Then this death of Christ as it is declared in the Gospel and the fruits of his death should be preached as also the hope of his blood shed as the Apostle witnesseth saying So oft as ye eat of this bread and drink of this cup ye shall shew forth the Lords death untill He come Thirdly according to the sure knowledge of spiritual truth of which the Euangelist John doth write as also for assurance of giving taking using and of truth by faith in hope as the Lord saith Take and eat Take and drinke Fourthly for the conjunct use for according to the institution and practise of Christ and the primitive Church the Priest should then administer when the necessity of believers requireth and he should receive with them as He saith Doe yee this in remembrance of mee And Paul saith The cup which we blesse is it not the communication of the blood of Christ and the bread which we break is it not the partaking of the body of Christ for wee many are one bread and one body who are partakers of that one bread and one cup. Fifthly for distinction of believers from the unbelievers and unworthy and for excommunication and rebuke of those who being defiled with the spot of vices do refuse to amend Of this saith Paul I would not have you partakers with the Devils yee can not drinke of the cup of the Lord and the cup of Devils And again he saith Put away the evill from yourselves for if any who is called a brother among you be covetous or a fornicator or an idolater or a dronkard or a railer or a thief with such a one eat ye not Behold this is our faith most Gracious King concerning the body and blood of Christ which as we are afraid to change or forsake these things which our Lord JESUS hath been pleased to testifie and for which end we doe now declare it so neither dare we add any thing unto it which the Lord of the Sacrament hath not added as also the primitive Church which followed Christ in poverty and affliction in singleness of heart hath not altered the ordinances of his law Concerning this Sacrament which our Lord through his great mercy hath ordained for love of his elect have many contentions arisen in opinions expositions and addition of sanctions or decrees so that contrary unto the intention of the Lord's institution they have furiously raged against others even to take away their lives But we for eschuing so great mischief have our refuge unto the faith of Christ even unto his words and meaning so often repeated in his word so that what He commanded to believe we do believe it simply and what He hath commanded to do we would do it faith fully truly we doe not only believe that that bread is His body which being taken and blessed and broken He testifieth to be his body but also if He had taken a stone and said This is my body we would have fully believed it Because of this our simple faith and because we will not suffer ourselves to forsake it for the opinion of men wee are called hereticks likwise for the actuall use unto which the word of Christ and his Apostles and the example of the work of the same sacrament doe invite us because we doe and use it so with upright faith in remembrance of the death of Christ wee are condemned judged worthy of prison and are afflicted for wee being tied unto Christs command and dissuaded by his forbidding doe worship him with reverence and honour due unto him and we feare to worship any other thing as him only sitting at the right hand with the Father and the Holy Ghost Wherefore gracious King let your highness understand that we do so not in contumacy or any contempt but for feare of God and in obedience unto him and wee pray that your Highness would shew compassion on us who are condemned for the faith of Christ as wee wish that the most High would of his grace be pleased to preserve and keep your honour from his wrath By the same faith we believe that the ordination of priests is truly from the high Bishop and great priest that in stead of the embassage of Christ the ministery preaching of the gospell doctrine judging offering of prayers by men thanksgivings and praises may be done unto God by them And it is from God unto men that the promise of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that the promises of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that they who intend to ordain others should follow the example of Christ and should consummate his ambassage with a right mind without respect of persons free from covetousness and simony By the same faith we declare that they which are to be ordained or promoted to higher or inferior orders should excell other believers in a godly life and faith in Christ for a lively faith sanctifieth and maketh fit unto all offices and possesseth the blessing and life for good works of an honest conversation are the garments and ornaments of a priest to the glory of the heavenly Father and example of the people and shew the vertue of the word they should also have more aboundant gifts of the Holy Spirit to wit more servent love toward Christ confidence of their own and their nieghbours salvation trust in God equity of mind a wholsome feeling of faith in a good conscience theire feet prepared unto the Gospell of peace prudence of Spirit knowledge of Gods law discerning of Spirits and the like What clerck soever by such an ordination is advanced unto the priesthood wee professe that such an ordination is a Sacrament because it is a signe of the true priesthood of Christ Jesus and of his ordination by God the Father and a forme of the ministry as of the head of his Church to offer unto God the incense of truth in Christ Wee approve that three things are necessary unto the full gradation of a presbyter first the the triall of his life faith gifts and fidelity in lesser things that are intrusted unto him another prayers with fasting thirdly the giving of power with words suitable there unto and the imposition of hands for corroboration By faith wee doe testify that marriage is a lawfull honest and
of evill that may follow The Pope inclineth the first way and commandeth that all be buried in silence Nevertheless the Cardinall of Capuasent these heads into Germany which some say was done by advice of the Pope to the end many might conceive hope of a Reformation in Rome Pe. Soave ibid. When November was approaching the Pope by his Bull nameth Vicentia to be the place of the Councell and because winter is at hand he nameth the first day of May in the year 1538. to be the first day of assembling At that time he sent his Legats to Vincentia and he went to Nice in Liguria under shew to make concord between the Emperour and Francis but as some said to persuade them both to quit Millain unto his son He dealt with them to send Prelats unto the Councell they had excuses and he was easily contented When he could effectuat nothing he returns and recals his Legates from Vicentia and by his Letters dated July 28. he prorogated the Councell unto Easter in the next year Pope Paul had been oft advised by the Cardinals to accurse King Henry VIII but he judged it safer to keep up his sword than draw it when he knew it could not pierce as certainly it is effectuall according as men do conceive of it But now King Henry had not only beheaded Cardinal Fisher this was an eye-sore to all the Cardinals and published books twice against the Popes authority of calling the Councell but lately also he had summoned Saint Thomas archb of Canterbury who had suffered death in defense of Papall authority and was Canonized by Pope Alexander III. and since the year 1171. had been worshipped in the Romane Church to appeare in Court had condemned him for treason and in pursuite of the condemnatory Sentence had caused the hang-man to take up his reliques and burn them and throwe the ashes into the river and had escheated all the treasure and ornaments that were dedicated unto S. Thomas And the Pope having now some hope by conference with the King of France at Nice that if he had peace with Caesar he wold invade England Upon Decemb. 17. An. 1538. accurseth Henry and ordaines that all his favourers shall be deprived of all honours and goods he commandeth all his subjects that they acknowledge him not as their Lord and all forreiners that they have not any commerce with English men and all Princes to rise in arms against him and take his King om and goods for their prey But what place this curse had it appeares saith Pe. Soave by the Leagues that the Emperour the French King and other Princes made with King Henry not long thereafter When the Pope heard that the Germanes were seeking a Conference of Divines he propoundeth this unto his Consistory and said It was necessary to determine some thing concerning the Councell Some Cardinals said Nothing could be concluded untill the Princes were reconciled Others more politick said There was more danger to be feared from Nationall Conferences than from the Councell and therefote it is more safe not to cast off a Councell but to suspend it at the Popes will indefinitely and so if any danger were appearing from any Nationall Councell or Conference he might prevent it by appointing time and place And so Juny 11. by a published Bull the Councell was suspended til the Pope should appoint time and place In the year 1541. he promised unto the Emperour to hold a Councell the next year and he would send a Legate unto the Diete at Spira to advise of the time and place and he shewed his opinion to name Vicentia He acquaintes the Venetians with this purpose They refuse because they had lately made peace with the Turke and if they consent that the Councell be within their bounds where they will treat of warr against him he will say that they conspire against him When the Emperour came into Italy Paul meets him at Busset by Parma and dealeth with him to give the Dutchy of Millain unto his son's son which had married Margarite the Emperours base Daughter and if he would do this the Pope profered to enter into league with him against France to give 150000. crowns yearly for some years and make some Cardinals of his nomination The Emperour demandeth 1000000. crowns presently and as many within a short space This he refuseth The Emperour spake not of the Councell because he had made it cleare that the stay was not his fault and he thought on other remedies after the warr They parted in shew of friendship but from that time he enclined more to aid France While he is so full of doubts he understandes that the Emperour had made a league with Henry VIII against Francis then he thinks it necessary to joyn with France The Emperour is informed how hardly the Pope had taken with his league sent him answer that Francis had made a league with the Turk and by his aid the Turks Navie had spoiled the sea-townes of Naples and why may he not then make a league of just defence with him who is a Christian albeit he deny the Pope to be the head of the Church yea and with the Popes expresse consent Francis had sought aid of the Protestants which are more adverse unto the Pope than the King of England is The Pope should ex officio have accursed the French King when he heard of his league with the Turke but it is cleare that he is an accepter of persons for when the Turkish Navy did assaile and spoile other parts of Italy they did no harme unto the dominions of the Pope and when they came to Ostia for fresh water and the Romans were amazed at the report thereof the Cardinall of Carpo who at that time of the Popes absence was his Vicar told the Citizens they needed not to feare But it did provoke the Pope yet more that the Emperour would not permit his Legate Cardinall Farnesius to go unto the Diet at Spira and had decreed concerning religion w●thout his knowledge yea to the evident contempt of Papall authority And again more that when in September An. 1544. Charles and Francis were reconciled Charles propounded this condition that they should both restore the old religion and amend the Court of Rome whence as from the fountain all these evills had flowed and to this effect they should force the Pope to assemble the Councell But the Pope did not feare their purpose to reform the Court because he knew they had contrary ends and he knew how to divide them when they came to the point and to make his own advantage Only this did vexe him that it shall be said They did force him to assemble a Councell Therefore he resolves to dissemble all his offences and prevented their solicitation by proclaming the Councell at Trent against March 15 and in the same Bull he exhortes the whole Church to give thanks for the peace between the two Monarchs whereby they may the
alive or other wayes put to death for the cause of religion John oecolampade in the year preceeding was retyred into a Monastery for feare of trouble but when he heard of the publick edict he set forth some Sermons and a book of Confession for which Glapio the Emperours Chapelan did threaten him mischief but he with consent of the Friers went away in safety Martin Bucer had been a Dominican 15 years at that time he left that Order and was Chaplaine unto Fredederik Prince Palatin and President of the Imperiall Councell the next year he was called to be Preacher at Landstall When Luther was lurking the Augustinians of Wittembergh put away the private Masse because it was an execrable abuse of the Lords supper and turned into a propitiatory sacrifice c. The Electour requires the judgement of the University then Justus Jonas Jo. Dolcius Andr. Carolstad Jerom Schurff Nic. Amsdorff and Phil. Melanchton approove the reasons of the Augustinians the Elector ratifieth their Act and not only dischargeth private Masses in the Cloister but in the open Church and then in the Church of the Castle Then and there also images were broken down auricular confession was forbidden both elements were delivered unto the people and Andr. Carolstad teaches that Civill courts should be ordered not by the law of man but of Moses he set forth a book of the lawfulness of Priests-mariage and against the vowes of Monks When Luther heard hereof though he did not approve all that was done and written yet he wrote unto Spalatinus August 15 Carolstad must have some liberty for he will not be content if any do oppose him Erasmus was offended that any Reformation was begun without the authority of a Generall Councell and he wrote unto Peter Barbire August 13. saying It can not be told how many and what kind of men did at the first love Luther when I had read a few pages of his books I did foresee the matter would turn to a broil I do so hate discord that even verity with sedition is unpleasant unto mee .... As I think many things are received in the Church which may be changed to the great good of Christian religion So nothing pleaseth me which is done tumultuously And in another dated August 23 he saith I wish it were true that Christiern King of Denmark said unto me while we were talking of such a purpose Gentle purges worke not but efficacious potions shake the whole body I see no good issue unless Christ himselfe turne the temerity of men into good c. Albert archb of Mentz began again to sell pardons in Hala of Saxony then Luther wrote unto him from his Pathmos Novemb. 25. threatning him that if he leave not that idol of pardons greater evils will be sent on him and if he dismisse not these which for eschuing fornication have marryed he will make known openly some things both of him and other bb which they desire to be buried in silence The Bishop returnes answer Decemb. 21. shewing that he had read his Letter with good lyking and afterwards he shall have no cause to complain of him and he will live as becomes a Christian Prince for which end he requires his prayers and of other good men seing that is the gift of God alone he can take admonitions in good part and wisheth well unto Luther for Christs cause The University of Paris sent forth their judgement against Luther's books and Ph. Melanchton opposeth it with this inscription of his book Against the famous Decree of the Parisians the apology of Melanchton for Luther Likewise Henry VIII King of England wrote against Luther in defense of the seven saeraments and the power of the Pope When Leo heard of it he sent unto him the title defender of the faith as Alexander VI. had given unto the King of Spain the title of Catholick King and I know not what other Pope did first call the King of France The most Christian King But saith Pe. Soave Luther was not dashed with authority but laying aside the due reverence of his person wrote against him with such bitterness of words as he had used against the puny Doctors and the medling of the King in this cause did not satisfy many in this controversy and as it hapneth in debates most do favour the weaker party and do much commend their weak endeavours Immediatly after the publishing of the Edict at Worms Hugh Bishop of Constance sendeth the Popes Bull and that Edict unto the town of Zurik and commandeth them to obey both the one and the other and he inveighes against Zuinglius and his followers Wherefore Zuinglius gives account unto the Senate and to the colledge of the Chanons of what he had taught and he writes unto the Bishop especially pressing that he forbeare not the priests with their concubines which wickedness saith he brings the clergy into contempt and is a very lewd example unto the people And he wrote unto the Swisers generally that they should remember a former licence which the Magistrats had granted unto the priests to have a concubine for saving the honesty of other mens wives which licence though ridiculous yet necessary for the time should be amended by turning fornication into lawfull marriage The Bishops command gave courage unto the black Friers to write against Zuinglius and he ceaseth not to defend his own doctrine he published 67. conclusions containing the summe of his doctrin and the abuses of the Clergy The Senate for removing such strife do appoint a convocation of all the Clergy within their jurisdiction against January 23. promising free liberty of reasoning unto both parties and by Letters invite the bb of Constance Curia and Basile either to come personally or to send their Commissioners There were assembled about 600. priests and as they called them Divines The Bishop of Constance sent in his name John Faber who afterward was Bishop of Vienna The Burgermaster beginneth saying It is not unknown what dissension hath arisen in the cause of religion therefore this assembly is called especially that if any can speak against these 67 conclusions of Zuinglius now made known unto them all he may now speak the same freely Faber shewes his Commission and alledgeth it was not a pertinent place nor time to decide things of that kind which appertain properly unto a Generall Councell and the Pope and Princes have agreed that one shall be called shortly Zuinglius said as Pe. Soave reports that is but a trick to deceive people with vaine hope and to keep them in grosse darknes it were better in the mean while to search some particulars that are sure and undoubted by the word of God and the received custom of the Church untill a more copious clearing of doubts come by a Councell When Faber was urged again and again to shew what he could speak against that doctrine of Zuinglius he said I will not deal with him by word but I will confute
Worde and celebration of the Lords Supper according to the first Institution These were all apprehended and carryed in carts into Paris where they received Sentence of death and being sent back 14. of them were burnt in one fire and the rest were whipped and banished These went into sundry Provinces and ceased not to glorify God by preaching the Truth namely Pharonus Manginns Petrus Bonuspanis c. Afterwards this Peter with other twell were burnt at Paris Jo. Fox in Act. mon. When King Francis The persecution is stopped for a time was sick unto death he repented of his cruelty and many write saith Thuan. loc cit that he advised his son Henry to try the injuries done by the Senate of Aignes against those of Piemont and he sent order unto that Senate to apprehend John a Monk and put him to an Assise that man had devised a new kinde of torment to wit he caused the Waldenses put their legs into boots full of seething tallow and in derision asked them If they were ready to ride When the Monk heard of this Mandate he fled into Avenion and within few days he was so tormented with ulcers that he wished death King Henry II. loved not Cardinal Turnon and such cruel persecuters So the Merindolians and other Waldenses gathered again and by advice of the Duke of Guise Aumalius presented unto the King their complaint against the iniquity cruelty of the Senate of Aignes and they did humbly beseech that their cause might be once heard and examined It had some beginning in the great Counsel as they call it but the King brought it to the high Parliament of Paris there the matter was debated publickly fifty dayes with great vehemency by Ja. Auberius for the Waldenses and Peter Robert for Aignes and Dion Riantius the Kings Advocate When the complaint and many cruelties were read all the hearers conceived hope of redress The event was only Guerin Regius Patronus one of the cruellest persecuters and having no favour among the Courtiers was beheaded and Miniers died as is said before Little was done publickly for Religion in France untill the year 1553 then many suffered at Lions and Paris among whom were Martialis Albus and Petrus Scriba who had been sent from Bern in Helvetia to preach the Gospell and before they had done any thing they were taken at Lions and the King would not spare them for the intercession of Bern. Thuan. lib. 12. XLIII Charles Cardinal of Lorrain intending toward Rome would do some thing to gratify the Pope therefore he persuaded the King to Persecution is renewed publish an Act commanding all Presidents to prosecute without any delay all censure of the Church against Lutherans The Senate of Paris answered unto the King that four years before he had caused it to be acted that according to the custom of his Ancestours who were all defenders of the Religion and liberty of the Church the power of life or death for Religion should be reserved unto the King but by this Act he loseth his priviledge and forsakes his servants and subjects and commits their fame goods and persons unto the pleasure of the elergy who by their severity in these years by past had not amended any errours but rather have exasperat the people and therefore it were more reasonable to commande the Bishops and priests to instruct their flocks in the worde of God more diligently either by themselves or by qualified Vicars and in time coming to promote only sufficient Pastours who have no need of Vicars Thuan. lib. 16. In the year 1557. Septemb. 4. a great number assembled in a private house of S. Jacques striet to hear the Worde and receive the Lords Supper in the night because they had not liberty in the day The multitude conveened in the nighour houses with weapons and stones to throw at these people in their outcoming they who came forth first were killed with stones and others taking courage upon necessity drew their swords and came forth all save to one saith Thuan. lib. 19. The author of the French Commentaries lib. 1. writs that the believers seeing that they were compassed on every side by the furious multitude had small hope to escape but some finding a way made open through a gate which was a singulare providence for the savety of many after they had returned to their prayers escaped by flight withour harm even as if God himself had gone before them Both these authors say that the women and weaker people about the number of 120 were taken by the Inquisitor saith Thuan and the other saith by the Magistrate and hurried into prisons and then burnt among whom were Nic. Clivius a Schoolmaster in Paris in the 60 year of his age Taurin Gravella in Senatu Patronus Nic. Cevius a Physicion and some Noble women Diverse reports were spread of this assembling the Monks preached that the Lutherans meet in the night without any light to fulfill their lusts the mother spared not to ly with her sone ..... their cloaths were found with the marks of such filthiness they killed their infants c. These things were reported unto the King but uncertainly yet none durst contradict them lest he were challenged to be of the same sect Thuan. Ibid. and the mindes of many did boile against them so that he was called the best man who could devise the means of their destruction The Protestants wrote an Apology shewing the falshood of those calumnies even as the like were imputed unto the antient Christians as is clear by undoubted testimonies and histories to the end Kings and Princes may be moved to hate them and now these are published by enemies of the Trueth to the end they may enjoy other mens goods which they have catched wickedly and therefore they humbly pray that the King would be pleased to try their cause c. French Commen lib. 1. They found means to lay this book in the Kings bedchamber and so be brought into his hands Antonius Demochares an Inquisitor and Ro. Cevalis Bishop of Aurincae wrote an answer unto this Apology but none durst reply because the Kings ears were so solde unto the impudent accusations of the Bishops and Cardinals and he sent the President Julianensis commanding all hereticks or Waldenses as they called them to submit themselves unto the Bishop of Rome in all points of Religion or to want lands and lifes The Reformed with humble answers appeased the minds of The Commissioners Osiand epitom hist cent 16. lib. 3. c. 26. The Princes of Germany and the Swisers sent unto King Henry entreating for those miserable men professing the same Religion with them In the mean while Philip King of Spain was entred into Picardy and had taken Sanquintin and other places so that Henry had need of aid from these Intereessors and did bear with the slackness of his Comissioners Thuan. loc cit In the same year it was ordained by King Henry that there should be
having interess That none of them take in hand to hold any consistory for administration of the said wicked lawes or assist there to in any way from thence forth Vnder the pain of death As yee will answer to us thereupon The which to do we commit to you conjunctly and severally our full power Given under our signet at Dundy the 14 day of December and of our reignes the second and 18 years These two Proclamations are not that I have seen in print but I have them by mee as yet with the Signet whole and entire which I received as I have hinted before among the papers of John erskin of Dun. The difference of the time in the Date is clear for the Queen was marryed in the beginning of Decemb. An. 1558. And I make use of them here against the impudent slaunders of An observation out of the premisses that malevolent Author who in that Latin History lately printed calleth the Reformation of the Church of Scotland a tumultuous and Vandal Reformation howbeit out of these Proclamations and all other proceedings heertofore it appeares clearly that whatsoever was done had the authority of the Publick Convention of the Estates and lesser things were done by the Counsell but the Queen being a Minor and not in the Country ftom her infancy and being under the tutory of her Vncle a stranger and an enemy of Religion who had given his power unto strangers for opposing Religion And all the antient Churches as yet standing both in burroughs and country do bear witnes that they did not at that time throw down any necessary church but only the abbeyes and monasteries and their churches IX About the 20. of December Robert Meluill of Raith who was sent with Lethintoun into England returnes and shewes that the Queen of England had granted a supply and appointed the Duke of Norfolk A treaty with England and the Frenches make trouble to their own losse to treat at Berwick with the Commissioners of the Scotish Nobility When the Regent was advertised of this conclusion she with her Counsell resolves to make an end of the warre before the English support could be in readiness and to begin at Fife Thereupon the French men take their journy by Sterlin and spoil where they come when they had passed the bridge the storm was so bitter and the snow had fallen so deep that they could not passe thorough the midle of the country but resolve to march by the coast and so unto Santandrewes and to have fortified the castle and City The Lord James stuart and others hearing that they were passed Sterlin sent some Forces with the Lord Ruthuen to withstand them and in his company was the Earle of Sutherland being directed as he professed by the Earle of Huntly to offer his assistance but his principall commission was for the Regent as afterward was made known But he was not long time in their company for in the first rancounter of the Scots and French men at Kingorn Sutherland was hurt in the arme and went back to Couper The French men being the greater number took Kingorn and the Scots return to Dysert where they continued skirmishing for three weeks that the enemies could not march further and the country was preserved from the spoil so soon as the Regent heard that Kingorn was taken she sent post to France shewing that thousands of the hereticks were slain and the rest were fled and requiring that some of her friends would come and take the glory of that Victory So Martiques was sent again with two ships A day was appointed by the Noble men to meet at Couper for sending Commissioners to treat with the Duke of Norfolk unto this meeting went the Noble men that were at Dysert and sixe were sent to Berwick both parties did quickly agree upon a league for defense of both kingdoms whosoever shall inuade either of them The contract was dated Fabruat 27. The capacity of a Treaty with England shewes what a considerable part of the kingdom the Congregation was at that time The Frenchmen at Kingorn hearing that the Noble men were gone from Dysert march a long the coast and at Kincraig they see a fleet of ships they apprehend them a supply from France but they were by and by informed that it was a fleet of Englishes and also that an Army was coming by land Wherefore they fearing to be severed from their fellowes at Lieth made the greater hast by night and day and came to Lieth on the third day losing more of their company by the way than they had killed of their adversaries as they had done more evill to their friends for of all that were professed enemies unto them only the Laird of Grange had his house blown up with powder but others of their faction were forced to furnish them or the souldiers took the readiest they could apprehend When complaints were made to the French Captaines they scornfully answered These were the Congregation-mens goods Or if they made faith that these were their own goods they were railed upon as unworthy and niggard cowards that made more account of their goods than of their friends And the professours of religion had put their goods out of the way But this spoil made that faction joyn the more willingly with the defenders of their liberty At that time the Barons of the Merns were busy in the Reformation of Aberdien The Earle of Huntly withstood but when he heard of the advancing of the Englishes he sent unto the Lords craving to be admitted among them as also he heard that Proclamations were sent through all the country charging all the subjects to meet in arms at Lithgow the last day of March and thence to passe in persuite of the French enemies At that time the English forces consisting of two thousand horse and 600 foot entred into Scotland and the Scots army joyned with them April 4. An. 1660. The same day the Regent removes her family to the castle of Edinburgh the Lord Erskin knowing that she was of intention to have the Frenches Masters of that strength would not deny her entry but he was so circumspect that both she and the castle were still in his power X. The Noble men then wrote unto her humbly again and again entreating Mediation of peace An. 1560 that she would dismiss the French souldiers and profering that they shall be safely conveyed into France and promising never to forsake dutifull obedience unto their Queen nor resist the King her husband in any thing that shall not tend to the subversion of the liberties of the Kingdom and beseeching her to weigh the equity of their petition and the inconveniences of warre The English Generall did in like manner direct two gentle men unto the French men in Lieth for the same purpose Both were answered with delayes but would not be delayed and assault the town and were repulsed twice with the losse of two men The King of France hearing
But four Divines of Witteberg and two of Strawsburgh came to Trent they would not address themselves unto the Legat as others had done before lest it were called an acknowledging of the Pop's Presidency but they went unto the Emperours Ambassador and craved to begin the Conference He persuades the Divines to yield in some niceties Nevertheless nothing could be done the Legate opposing alwayes either concerning the manner of the Treaty or the matter at which to begin ot pretending his own infirmity of body and at last he was so passionat that many thought he was not right in his wits and departed as also the Protestants pretending difficulty of abiding because of new warrs in Germany Then the Nuntij fearing to be left alone sent to Rome for information in those straits After advice from Court a Session was held Aprile 28 and the Synod was suspended for two years The Spainish Prelats being 12. in number A Spanish Protestation against the adjournying of the Synode protested against this decree but the Pope had now accorded with France and therefore he made no account of the Imperialists XI The suspension for two years continued ten because the motives were changed The Pope was out of all hope to regain Germany And Ce●ar was so earnest before for the Synod because he intended to erect a fifth Monarchy and by means of Religion to immortalize his fame for he thought to subdue all Germany by treaties or Arms and then to make a new purchase of Italy and perhaps of France But when he ●aw Gods hand for the Protestants and a division of his own family he layd aside Various thoughts concerning the Synode all thought of the Councel and the Romans cared as little for it But after the death of Pope Marcel An. 1555. it was one of the Capitulations in the Conclave that the future Pope should by advice of the colledge call a Synod within two years to finish the begun Reformation to determin the other controversies of Religion and to endeavour the acceptation of the Tridentin Canons in Germany But when this was motioned unto Pope Paul IIII. he said with much indignation I have no need of a Synod I am above all Cardinall Bellai replied A Councel is necessary not to addauthority unto the Pope but to find meanes of procuring an uniformity in all places He answered If it were necessary it must be held at Rome and nowhere else I never consented to hold a Synod at Trent because it is among the Lutherans and a Synod should consist of Bishops only and no others should be admitted no not for advice unless Turks Nota who were the members of that Councell also be admitted it is a foolish thing to send unto the mountains 60 of the least able Bishops and 40 of the most insufficient Divines as hath been done twice and to believe that the world can be regulated by such better then by the Vicar of Christ and the colledge of Cardinals who are the pillares of Christendom and by the counsel of Prelars and Divines who are more in number at Rome then can be brought to Trent Nevertheless An. 1557. when he heard that the King of France had made Acts in Parliament concerning Religion he would have called a Synod but he was so perplexed with difficulties in Rome that he could not After his death the same Capitulation was renewed in the Conclave An. 1559 to restore a Synod upon account of the necessity in France and Belgio and the open defection of Germany and England So Pius 4. began to advise privatly with his trustiest friends whether a Synod were expedient for the Apostolical See if not whether it be safer to deny it absolutly or to make shew of readiness and to hinder it by impediments Or if it be expedient whether he shall wait untill he be entreated or call it as by his own motion It was resolved Because he can not eschue it he should prevent the petions of others and so he might have the fairer occasion to cover his own purpose in crossing the designes of others So far he goeth and no more he shewes unto the Cardinals and All Ambassadors that he is desirous of a Synod and he willeth them to advise what things have need to be reformed and of the place and time and of other preparations but he intended it not untill the Parliament of France had decreed to hold a Nationall Synod Then the Pope was advised by the Cardinals that it is safer to hasten the Generall then to permit a National Synod But then comes into consideration Where it must be seing a Synod is much after the mind of him who is strongest in the place Bolonia was named but Trent was judged fittest Both the Emperour and Francis King of France except against the place and they craved also that the former canons be reexamined and moreover the Emperour demanded other things to be granted to wit the communion of the cup the marriage of the clergy c. The Pope answered he was content where it may be if the Italians shall have free access and recess he will sooner quite his life then grant the second and the third can not be granted but in the Councel In his heart he was glad of those difficulties except that the affaires of France require hast for he had hope of France but despared of the others The mean while was the Counsel at Fountainbleaw as is above Pag. 154. When the Pope understood of the discourses there he resolves to call a generall Councell but then he questioneth Whether it shall be termed a new Councel or a resumption of the former The Emperour and Frances will have it called a new one because the Protestants will not accept that which hath condemned them The Pope and Philip King of Spain will not have the canons to be called into question that have been decided The Cardinals propound a midle course to terme it neither a new one nor a resumption and November 24. it was decreed in consistory to call it Indictio Concily Tridentini and to begin at Easter next But the words of the Bull gave sati●faction to no party The Pope said None should except against the word Continuare in the Bull because it hindereth not to examine former decrees And he sent his Breves to all the Princes of Germany assembled then in the Diet at Neumburgh with this inscription Vnto his beloved son the Duke or Count c. None of those Princes would open any of them but sent them back unto the Legat's lodging On the last day of their assembly this answer was given unto the Legates The most honourable Electors Princes Ambassadorsand Counselors of the most sacred Empire of Rome acknowledge that the Church hath need of Reformation and for this cause many godly learned and wise men of all ages and conditions have for a long time wished that the Church may be in a better estate and have prayd that
obedience were to confesse himself a vassall This treaty continued a year and in end it was concluded that the Pope shall confirm the election without saying that obedience was demanded or not demanded promised or not promised Ibid. He lamented when he considered the renting of the Church with so many different opinions nevertheless he maintained peace and no way hindered the gospell and he maintained a Protestant Minister Phauserus in his Court for a space he was oft at Masse nor did abrogate papistry He said once to William Bishop Olovincensis There is no greater sin than to domineer over mens consciences At another time he said Who take on them to command mens consciences they climbe into the castle of heaven In the beginning of his reigne he refused to pay unto Solyman the acknowledgement which his father had covenanted to pay for the peaceable possession of his part of Hungary and in the year 1566. he had his first Diet at Ausburgh where he sought subsidy against the Turk The Protestants sought a confirmation of the peace in the cause of Religion and then it was established not only by universal consent but confirmed also by oath that the Catholicks should not trouble the Protestants in the exercise of their Religion nor in the possession of their goods moveable nor vnmoveable and that the Protestants should permit the like liberty unto the Papists within their dominions Under pain of Outlawry to the transgressors on both sides As also it should be free unto any person to turn from the one Religion unto the other if they do hold their lands of the Emperour immediatly but if any Archb. or other Prelat will embrace the Reformed Religion he should renounce his Benefice with all its revenues to be conferred on a Papist excepting those goods or Monasteries which belonged not unto them that are immediatly subject unto the Emperour and have been possessed by the Reformed since the year 1552 so that no plea of law should have any power against them c. This agreement is word for word in Geo. Schonbor Politic. Lib. 4. c. 6. After this Diet Maximilian inuaded Transsylvania and took Wesperin and Dodis Wherefore Solyman came with a hudge army to aid John Vaivoda Prince of Transsylvania and took some towns from the Emperour In the mean time Solyman dieth but his Captain Mahumet a Bassa conceiled his death untill Selim was created successor unto his father then they took mo towns that Maximilian sought peace and obtained it upon harder conditions than before The same year 1567. William à Grumbach a Noble man but a vassall of the Bishop of Wirtzburg took armes with the aid of the Marques of Brandeburg against his superior wherefore the Bishop outlawed him and brought him to poverty yet he found favour with John-Frederik Duke of Saxony and some others he with some horsemen inuades Writzburg and supriseth it ere the Bishop raised an army the surprisers were gone hither and thither They began another plot the Emperour sent Augustus Elector of Saxony against them he prevailed John-Frederik was sent prisoner into lower Austria Grumbach and his Chancelorr Duke Bruck were quartered Baron Baumgartner and some others were beheaded and the castle of Grimmenstain was made levell with the ground Such was the end of proud rebells Maximilian lived the rest of his dayes in peace An. 1470. the Turks wanne Nicosia a chief town of Cyprus and Famaugusta or Salamys after a years seege and contrary to the conditions of rendring Bragadin Governour of the town was excoriat quick at command of the Bassa Mustapha and others were most cruelly murdered So all Cyprus was taken from Crhistians Then the Venetians who had possessed it 200 years made a league with the Pope and King of Spain John Duke of Austria a sone of Charles V. was Generall of the Navy the battell was fought in the firth of Corinth aliàs Golfo de Lepanto 25000. Turks were slain 4000. captive and almost all their Navy with rich spoile came into the handes of Christans 14000. captive Christians were delivered An. 1575. Maximilian sought by many meanes to have been chosen King of Poland and when Steven Prince of Transsylvania was preferred he was never seen to be jovaill again He caused his son Rodulph be chosen King of the Romanes in a Diet at Ratisbon and died in time of the Diet in Octob. 1576. Pet. Mexia II RODULPH II. immediatly after his coronation sent to Rome and sought not only confirmation but to be declared the eldest sonne of the Church He held his first Diet at Ausburg An 1582 where was no talk of Religion but only he urged the Gregorian Calendare and sought aid against the Turks He took armes against Gebhard Bishop of Colein because he forsook the Pope as followes An. 1584. Rodolph and Amurath III. Emperour of Turks made truce for 93 years but the same year in October 10000 Turks inuade the landes of Carniola they burnt and wasted sundry towns and villages and carried away Christians of both sexes in eaptivity within two dayes a company of Christians meet them in Croatia they deliver the Christians and routed the Turks Osiand In the year 1592. Amurath thought to have made conquest of all Hungary and entred into Croatia then followed continuall wars untill the year 1606 victory enclining now to the one hand and then to the other Rodulph had a league with the Duke of Muscove and received supplied both of men and money against Amurath Rodulph reigned 36. years CHAP. IIJ. Of Diverse COVNTRIES J. BY the preambulatory pieces before Ge. Cassanders consultation Consultatio Cassandri it is cleare 1. from the testimony of Ja. Thuan that the Emperour Ferdi●and was not satisfied with the Councel of Trent and though too late he perceived that he was deceived by Cardinal Moron wherefore he took another course to compose the controversies in Religion when he could not find remedy abroad he would do his best at home So with the advice of his son Maximilian he sent for George Cassander living then in Duisburg to shew some way of conciliating the controversies of the Augustan Confession His Letters were dated May 22. 1564. 2. The Emperours purpose was that if by the advice of prudent men he could effectuat no more yet he might have a setled form of Religion in Hungary Bohem and his other hereditary Dominions Cassander was not able to make travell because he was goutish But after another Letter from the Emperour and from King Ferdinand he wrot his Consultation for that effect before he sent it Ferdinand was gone and it was delivered unto Maximilian None hath written against the Consultatio it seemes Papists would not write against it because he holdeth that the Roman Church is a true Church albeit corrupt and it is a schism to depart from it The Reformed writ not against it because he maintaines the most and main articles of their doctrine The book is scarce to be had but in a big volume with
Greek who had made apostacy and turned to Mahumet and when Amurathes was sending a multitude of Greeks as a Colony unto some desert places the Patriarch called ●t an uniust thing One Pachomius reported this unto Amurathes and he was made Patriach Da. Chytrae in Saxon. Lib. 27. The Christians at mount Libanus were subdued by the Turk in the year 1585. whereas before they had preserved their liberty Cas Consaluus a Lusitanian writes that the Island of Iapan in the Indian sea is divided into 60. Princedoms of which Francis of Bungo Brotasius of Arimo Bartholemew of Omuran were becom Christians and sent their Ambassadors who after three years journying arrived at Rome to acknowledge the Pope Gregory 13. a litle before his death But I will believe it saith Osiander when Iesuits shall leave off to ly VI. The year 1584. was sad unto Belgio They looked for the returning Sad things in the Netherlands of Francis Duke of Anjow their Governor from France But he fell into a dangerous sicknes yet in May he recovered so far that he went to tilting and the next day he took a potion to purge away the dregs of his malady and died on the morrow When he saw the danger of death he confessed that nothing did more grieve him as that he had followed the bad Counsel of wicked men in the administration of Belgio and now he could not amend his former errors as he had intended But by writing and by his Counsellers he advised his Brother the King to be a Protector of those Lands He would not admit his Confessor but professed sorow for his miscariages and his faith in the mercy of God throgh JESUS CHRIST the only Mediator and altogether rejected the Romish rites as extream unction c. Within a month after his death William Prince of Orange was traiterously killed in Delff by a Burgundian who was immediatly apprehended and punished The same year Ghent and Yper and some other towns in Flanders which before were Reformed were necessitat to make agreement with the Duke of Parma and so was Antwerp in Brabant the next year VII In these two now named years were many sturres for the Troubles in Riga for the new Calendar New Calender I will name one in Riga of Livonia Steven King of Pole had erected a colledge of Jesuits there in the year 1581. and he commanded that they should keep Christmes according to the new Style The people would not be present But when the 24 day of the old Style was come they entreated the Senate that they might have Sermon the next day as before It was refused Nevertheless they assembled in the Churches about 8. of the cloke in the morning and praised God with their psalms and the Rector preached in the school unto his Scholares many people hearing George Neuner the Minister stirred up the Burghgrave Nicolaus Eik against the Rector and he sent for him to come into the court When the Rector appeared he was detained there The word is spread through the town that the Rector and some citizens were to be beheaded that night for that preaching The Conrector Valentin Rascius and some others did supplicat the Burghgrave to dismiss the Rector and would have engaged themselves for his compearance again when it should be required and if this be denied they told that the people could not be stayd from a tumult Because the Burgrave would not yield the scholares and people break up the court-doores and took out the Rector whether he would or not Then they pulled down the houses first of Neuner then of Eik and of a Syndic Gothard Welling The next day they gather again and complain among themselves openly what before they had endured with silence that Jesuits were brought in the Popish Religion was restored their liberties were taken from them c. They shut the gates of the town and call the Senate to shew whether those things were done by their consent and then understood that all those things had been done by a few seeking the Kings favor and for their privat interest This broil continued fourtien dayes in the end they agreed to restore unto the Burgrave and others all their damages that there should be an Act of oblivion and the new Style should cease c. When the gates were opened Eik Neuner and the others went unto the King with their complaints He sent a Cardinal to be Governour of the town annulled all the Treaty consisting of 68. articles and caused a greater sum of money to be payd unto the plaintifs Chrytrae ibid. VIII The Frenches who had left their native Land and dwelt at A conference at Monpelgart Monpelgart in the Dutchy of Wortembergh did in the year 1586. solicite the Divines there and then the Duke Frederik that there might be a publick Conference of the German and French Divines hoping for some union of the above named controversies They assemble in March the Duke was present all the time On the one side was Iacob Andreae Chancelar of Tubing Lucas Osiander Chappellan of Wurtembergh and two Civilians from Duke Lewes and on the other side were Theo. Beza and Anton. Fajus from Geneve Abra. Musculus and two Civilians from Bern and Claud. Alberius from Lausan Many others were hearers The Theses or propositions are long and many and the Disputation was longer I give the sum briefly and faithfully The first day to wit Marc. 21. the Wurtembergers according to the order prescribed give in write Theses of the Lords Supper shewing that all do agree that all believers eat Christs flesh and drink his blood spiritually all condem the renting of Christs flesh with mens teeth as also transsubstantiation and physical or local presence So that the only question is Whether in the Supper the very body and blood of Christ be verily and substantially present and be distributed and be received with the bread and wine by the mouth of all them who receive the Sacrament whether worthy or unworthy believers or not believers yet so that the believers only receive confort and the unbelievers do eat to their own condemnation We hold the affirmative say they that is By those words IN with and under the bread we understand nothing but that they who eat that bread and drink that wine do receive Christs body and blood with the bread and wine 2. By the words Substantially Essentially Really and Orally we mean no other but the very eating and presence of his body and blood 3. They argue from the trueth of Christs words This is my body and the almighty power of Christ seing his words declare his will and by his power he can give his body unto all receivers 4. The manner how the worthy and unworthy receive Christs body is not expressed in the Scripture and we say It is supernaturall and incomprehensible by the wit of men and should not be disputed nor searched curiously These theses were given unto Beza as it was
there of but only to advise upon their own grievances and to maketheir addresses unto his Ma● to supplicat his protection Then the Messinger threatned the town that they had received these men It was answered The town is patent unto Jewes and heathens and far less could those noble men he hindered to enter But a Messinger of the b. of Cujaw spoke more menacingly and said It was his Priviledge to preserve Religion to call and moderate Synods They answerd Albeit the bishop hath no jurisdiction over them neither are they obliged to giue him account of their actions nevertheless to satisfy his curiosity they declare this to be the cause of their meeting 1. that if any difference were among those of their Confession either in doctrine or in disorderliness of manners it may be composed orderly and so they might continue peace among themselves as we find in the Acts that the Apostles had their meetings upon the like occasions 2. Because they had suffered most grievous injuries from their adversaries by burning their churches killing some and most shamefully drawing others out of their graves they had assembled to bewail their calamities and to advise upon a way of peace and savety hereafter but it seemes that the priests would not suffer them to bemoan their miseries And if the Bishop pleaseth he may come into the town with as many as he willeth as for them they will not medle with his consulations When these Messages were done they consulted upon these propositions and first they all did subscribe the consent of doctrine as it was done at Sendomiria and because heretofore they had followed different forms of confession some the Augustan some the Bohemian and others the Helvetian now to remove all differences and namely that of the sacrament they vnanimously agree to teach heerafteraccording to the Augustan confession which was written in the year 1552. and if any manshall write teach or speak other wise or accuse any or embracing this consent he shall not be accounted as a brother of the Polonian Church Then they did accorde upon some articles of Church-discipline and to erect a publick School by contribution of the Nobility 2. They sent two Palatini of Minsk and Leszink with others to represent unto the King how their churches were demolished in Cracow Posnania and Vilna many dead were pulled out of their graves and some Noble men were shutt at posts they name Bonar and a Lady Zeczulmuzka and that the Jesuits do instruct the people in the villages to kill their Masters of the Evangelical profession promising unto them not only immunity but large rewards yea they entice the women to murder their own husbands and to supplicat his Majesty that he would protect his faithfull servants and subjects provide for common peace of religion according to his coronation-oath and not suffer himself to be deceived by those strangers the Iesuits who are banished out of France and disturb other Nations Dau. Chytrae in Chronic. Saxonic Osiander addeth These Messingers received not a gracious answer This King Sigismund married the sister of Ferdinand Duke of Austria and after her death he married her sister by dispensation of the Pope XII Here is a Letter sent by the Emperour Rodolph unto Theodor A letter shewing the condition of several Nations at that time geat Duke of Moscove in the year 1595. hinting at the estate of the most part of Europe at that time His preface is that he had heard read unto him with great joy the Duk 's Letters sent by his Embassador Michael Juvanouviz by which as also by the report of his Ambassador he understood his good will in sending with a Christian and laudable zeal his gifts and aid against the Turk the common enemy of Christian name and blood and in promising unto him the Emp. and the Christian world his best furtherance and offices Which is not only acceptable unto himself but shall also be unto his honor and praise through the Christian world and a laudable precedent unto other Princes as also himself and all the house of Austria shall declare their offices of thankfulnes and courtesy unto him and his friends upon all occasions that the brotherly alliance continued from their fore fathers may be known unto all Nations As for the confederacion amongst the chief Princes of the Christian world he hath not failed in his diligence to the uttermost but hithertills he could prevail nothing with the Pope and King of Spain because they are far distant and the Pope being but lately advanced is taken up with manifold cares for the distressed Church and in the mean while doth aid Cesar wi●h men and money and declares a great zeal against the common enemy as also he hath sent a Legate into Moscove for that effect but the King of Spain being antient and infirm hath such business not only with his rebellious subjects but with France and England in every place that he must be spared and nevertheless he hath declared heretofore his good will unto us and hath helped with a great sum of money And when I shall understand that he recovereth health I shall not be slack to plead this cause by our Ambassadors both there and at Rome untill we obtain some assurance from them both Of which we have resolved to acquaint your Brotherhood by our Ambassador as also of the success of the Christian Army especially when the Lord of hosts shall give us more victories In the mean while we think it necessary to know of the condition of the King of Persia and how we may deal with him before we send any unto him howbeit it is most certain that it greatly concerneth all Christendom to have the Persians our friends wherefore we entreat friendly that your Brotherh would continue mutuall friendship with them and cherish their affection towards us Whereas your Brotherh hath endeavoured to raise the Tatars against the Turks howbeit you have not prevailed yet we thank you kindely entreating also brotherly to persevere in that good purpose with them so far as you can yet we have heard that many Tatars are entred into Valachia whom we must do what we can to resist As for the Treaty of peace begun with the Swede we have our Ambassador Mincowitz there of a long time untill it be brought to an end as also we have commanded Warkutzy to repair thether when he shall expede his business By whom your Brotherh may understande that we have done diligently in that cause as also we promise with a brotherly mind unto your Brotherhood that we shall do our endeavour at all occasions and times and in whatsoever other affaires and whatsoeveur can be sought of us as a faithfull brother you may expect Wee pray God to keep your Brotherh in ●avety unto us and all Christendom whom we love with all brotherly faithfulnes and loving-kindness Given at Pragve Septemb. 22. 1595. At that time the Emperour intending to send Maxinilian Duke of
Presbyteries were ever aimed at and in some parts begun but this winter following with consent of the King and by his commission they were constitute through all the realm as followes in the next assembly 3. Wee have heard a complaint here of many Apostates come into the country and namely in the end is mention of Nicolburn he was a professor of Philosophy in S. Leonards Colledge and became a Papist At that time were found some dispensations sent from Rome permitting Papists to promise swear and subscribe and do what other thing might be required of them so that in mind they continue firm and vse diligence to advance privily the Roman faith These dispensations were shewd unto the King for remedy at first he gives order unto one of his Ministers John Craig to writ a form of abiuration of Papistry In obedience John Craig writes a Confession relative unto the former Confession which was wholly positive and abjuring all the corruptions of Rome both in doctrin and superstitious rites and wholl hierarchy together with a promise to continue in the obedience of the doctrin disciplin of this Church and to defend the same to our vocation and power all the dayes of our lifes under the paines contained in the law and danger both of body and soule And he addeth and seing many are stirred up by Satan and that Roman Antichrist to promise swear subscribe and for a time use the holy sacraments in the Church deceitfully against their own consciences minding thereby first under the externall cloak of religion to corrupt and subvert secretly Gods true religion within the church and afterward when time may serve to become open enemies and persecutors of the same under vain hope of the Popes dispensation devised against the word of God to his greater confusion and their double condemnation in the day of the Lord Jesus Wee therefore wil●ng to take away all suspicion of hypocrisy and such double dealing with God his Church protest and call the Searcher of all hearts to witness that our minds hearts do fully agree with this our Confession promise and subscription so that we are not moved for any worldly respect c. These words were added for the better tryall of Papists and the sincerity of professors This Confession was subscribed by the King his houshold January 28. 1580. or according to the r●ckoning of other Countries 1581. and a charge was given by the King March 2. and it was proclamed commanding Commissioners and Ministers to urge their parishoners to subscribe this Confession and to delate the Refusers unto the Ministers of the kings house that the K. and Counsell may take order with them and more of it followes In the mean time to-wit December 31 the Earle of Morton was challenged Januar. 18. he he was imprisoned at Dunbarton Juny 1. he was arraigned and condemned for that he knew the plot against the kings father and did not reveel it and the next day beheaded A rare exemple of humane frailty he who lately was Governor of the realm and in the preceding year wa● the object of the great Ones envy was brought so unexpectedly to such a death Before his execution he remembred what John Knox had said unto him and called him a true Prophet XVIII The Assembly conveens at Glasgow Aprile 24. year 1581. where 1580. The 40. Assembly was Will. Cuningham of Caprintoun commssioner from the king Commissioners from Synods c. Robert pont is chosen Moderator 1. Forsomuch as for purgation of the Ministry from unworthy persons in that function Order was taken in the last Assembly that all men whither Ministers or others should give up the names of scandalous Ministers as they will answer unto God yet by shortness of time no great effect followed Therefore as before the Assembly requires all men as they tender the glory of God and the wee ll of his Church that they delate and give up the names of such persons in writ tomorrow after noon c. The Originall Register wanteth the third and fourth Sessions 2. Whereas in the Assembly at Dundy in the Act against Bishops some difficulty appeared unto some brethren by the word Office what is meant by it The Assembly present consisting for the most part of them who were present and voiced in that Assemb to resolve men of the true meaning of that act Declares that they meaned wholly to condemn the estate of bishops as they are now or lately were in Scotland and the same was the determination of the Church at that time 3. The Kings Commissioner delivereth the Kings Letter together with certain rolls containing a form of planting particular churches and the number and names of the presbyteries with the names of churches within every Presbytery The Assembly appointes certain persons within severall Provinces to conveen tomorrow at sixe a clok in the morning to sicht these rolls and report c. 4. The Assembly having received from the King some demandes propounded in writ with the answers unto the Articles that were presented unto his Ma. by the Church and a Copy of a Letter to be directed unto Barons and Ministers for union and division of Churches with the names of the persons that were appointed to travell in that work And thereby understanding the godly and zealous mynde of his Ma. did praise God heartily the He had moved the Kings heart to have a care of his Church An● first entring into consideration of the Answers thought good to insist with the King and Counsell in these articles 1. That it would please his Ma. to appoint a Judge in Edinburgh to cognosce and judge of injuries don to Ministers in execution of their Office and to punish according to the quality of the crimes and appoint a Proctor for the Ministers injured 2. That an act of Parliament may be made concerning the deprivation of scandalous Ministers and the causes of deprivation to be expressed in the act 3. That the Benefices vaking may be disponed unto the Ministers where the Benefice vakes if they be able as it was agreed in the Conference at Sterlin Followes the tenor of the Kings propositions given by his Commssioner with this inscription Instructions to our trusty and welbeloved Willam Cuningham of Caprintoun directed by Us with advice of the Lords of the Secret Counsell Unto the Assembly of the Ministers of the Church conveened at Glasgow Aprile 20. 1581. You shall deliver Our Letter unto them and let them understand that such of their number as travelled with Us having desired Our answer unto their Articles sent from the Assembly in Dundy in July last Wee caused some of Our Counsell conferr with them at severall times in Octobe● last as also lately which all find the matter concerning the thirds of the Benefices mentioned in the first of these Articles as there required not to be the readiest means either to make the Ministers assured of their stipends or to make Us any reasonable
oath unto King Edward in Newcastle on Tine The Nobility were male-contented but they must dissemble It happened after some years that Macduff Earl of Fife was killed by the Earl of Abernethy and because this family was potent Macduffs Brother could not obtain justice in Scotland for the slaughter therefore he appealed unto King Edward who summoned King John to London He appeared and at first sat down with Edward thinking to answer by his Proctor but he must stand at the Bar This indignity begot in him a desire of liberty When variance fell between France and England John thinking this a fit occasion renewed the old league with France and by the Abbot of Arbroth sent into England with consent of the Estates a revocation of his dedition Wherefore Edward resolveth to take Arms against Scotland He sent for Robert Bruce Son of the Competitor being then defunct and profered him the Kingdom if he would go with him to expel King John or cause his Friends in Scotland to desert or not assist John Robert did both At that time four thousand Scots were slain in sundry fights and in the Castle of the Burgh of Montross King John did resign unto the Commissioners of King Edward all right to the Crown Sir Hugh Cressingham was made Governor of Scotland and John was carried into England yet by intercession of Pope Boniface he was let go into France his Son being kept in pledge lest he did attempt any new trouble Then Edward went against France and in his absence the Scots had mutual treaties with France they chose twelve Governors of the Country and many incursions were in the borders on both sides At that time arose the famous William Walace a Gentleman of mean estate but extraordinary in courage and strength he did many rubs unto the English and because the Governors were thought remiss he was chosen to be the only Governor and called the Vice-Roy of King John He recovered many Towns from the English and threw down many Castles and Forts lest his little Army were divided in keeping them The Earl of Warren and the Lord Percey were sent against him but because these had bad success Edward made truce with France and came against Scotland where he prevailed so that in a Parliament at St. Andrews all the Nobility and Estates did acknowledge him only Walace kept himself quiet in the high-Lands When Robert Bruce put the King in minde of his promise Edward scoffed at him saying Had he no other thing to do but fight for a Kingdom unto him Buchan Histo At that time Edward destroyed the ancient Laws of Scotland and sought how to bring the two Nations in amity and affinity He burnt the Chronicles and Books of Divine Service constraining them to follow the Missale of Sarum those who were repugnant unto these changes were severely punished He removed the most learned men into Oxford Briefly he destroyed all the Monuments of Antiquity and upon the least occasion he cut off all who in his judgement could enterprise any insurrection Boeth lib. 14. Walace lurked a while but he stirred again and prevailed both in favor and power among the people as followeth in the next Century THE FIFTH AGE Of the CHURCH OR The History of the Church reverting and of Antichrist raging containing the space of 300. years from the year 1300. until the year 1600. CENTURY XIV CHAP. I. Of POPES 1. BENEDICT the XI was chosen Pope November 1. An. 1304. He absolved Philip King of France from the excommunication of Boniface and restored the Cardinals John and James Columnae which had written against Pope Boniface And Platina addeth Boniface had pursued them more then became a Priest for envy against them and too much respect of the faction of the Guelphs He sate nine months 2. CLEMENS the V. after contention of the Cardinals the space of ten months was elected being in the mean time at his own seat in Burdeaux When it was certified unto him he commanded all the Cardinals to come unto Lions There were present at his Coronation Philip King of France his Son Charles John Duke of Burgundy c. In the midst of the Procession a great wall fell upon them so that John and twelve other persons were killed Philip was hurt the Pope was struck from his horse and lost out of his Mitre a Carbuncle of the value of six thousand crowns Platin. When this unlucky pomp was ended he created many French Cardinals and not one Italian and removed the Court of Rome unto Avenion where it continued seventy four years as in another transportation to Babylon We read not of any which in all this time made exception that Rome was the seat of St. Peter and house of the holy Ghost and therefore the Pope should abide at Rome Clemens avouched openly to keep a Concubine the Daughter of Count de Fuxa P. Morn in Myster ex Villano He sent three Cardinals with Senatorial power to govern Rome and Italy Because Ferraria had revolted and submitted themselves unto the Venetians he excommunicated the Venetians for accepting them and gave all their goods unto spoil wheresoever they could be apprehended the like he did unto the Florentines and other Cities for their revolting Sardinia did belong unto Genua and he gave it unto the King of Sicily for winning it from the Turks How he dealt with the Emperor it followeth But here it is to be remembred how he ordained that none should use the title or exercise the power of Emperor until he were confirmed by the Pope And when the Imperial seat is vacant the Pope shall reign as Emperor until one be chosen He confirmed the Feast of Corp. Christi granting Indulgences of one hundred days unto all who shall be present at the Matins c. Lib. 3. Clement tit 16. de reliquiis ca. Si Dominum .. It seemeth that the people had not regarded the former Institution He was the Author of the seventh Book of Decretals before his death he did condemn them as containing may snares in them and caused them to be burnt saith Io. Naucler But his Successor did confirm them He excommunicated Andronicus the Emperor of the East as an Heretick because he would not suffer the Greeks to acknowledge the Pope for their head c. Because he would not reside at Rome the Romans refuse to give him the patrimony of St Peter and thereby he was brought into the greater exigence But Platina saith A great famine was the cause of his scarcity Then he lived by the money of Bishops which came unto him to be confirmed and by such other shifts and gifts yet by these means he is said to have gained 9500. marks of Silver besides his expense which he bestowed liberally in one year Platina writeth that he ordained the Annates or the first years stipend of all Annates Intrants to be paid unto the Pope out of all Countries But Pol. Virgil. de inven rer lib. 8. cap. 2. saith It