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A02208 The dialogues of S. Gregorie, surnamed the Greate: Pope of Rome: and the first of that name deuided into fower bookes. Wherein he intreateth of the liues, and miracles of the saintes in Italie: and of the eternitie of mens soules. With a shorte treatise of sundry miracles, wrought at the shrines of martyrs: taken out of S. Augustin. Together with a notable miracle wrought by S. Bernard, in confirmation of diuers articles of religion. Translated into our English tongue by P.W.; Dialogi. Part 1. English Gregory I, Pope, ca. 540-604.; Woodward, Philip, ca. 1557-1610.; Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. De civitate Dei. Book 22. Chapter 8. English. 1608 (1608) STC 12349; ESTC S121026 216,240 619

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and liued longe after And yet for all this we must not thincke that he lost that place which he had bycause there is no doubt but that he mighte by the praiers of his in●ercessor liue yet more vertuouslie after his death who had a care before he died to please almightye God But whye do I spende so many wordes in discoursinge of his wonderfull life when as we haue so many miracles Visitation of relickes or Pilgrimag● euen at these daies wroughte at his bodye for as he was wont to do when he liued vpon earth so doth he nowe continually at his deade bones disposess deuils and heale suche as be sicke so often as men praye for such graces with faith and deuotion But I meane nowe to returne to the prouince of Valeria of which I haue hearde most notable miracles from the mouthe of Venerable Fortunatus of whom longe before I haue made mention who comminge often to visit me whiles he teporteth olde●stories continually he bringeth me newe delighte OF MARTIRIVS A MONCKE in the prouince of Valeria CHAPTER XI A Certaine man liued in that prouince called Martirius who was a verye deuout seruaunt of almightye God and gaue this testimony of his vertuous life For vpon a certaine daye the other monkes his brethren made an harth-cake forgettinge to make vpon it the signe of the crosse for in The signe of the cross that country they vse to make a crosse vpon theire loaues diuidinge them so into fovver partes vvhen the seruaunt of God came they told● him that it vvas not marked vvho seinge it couered vvith ashes and coales asked vvhy they did not signe it speaking so he made the signe of the crosse vvith his hande against the coales vvhich thinge vvhiles he vvas in doing the cake gaue a great cracke as thoughe the panne had bene broken with the fire after it vvas baked and taken out they founde it marked with the signe of the crosse vvhich yet not any corporall touchinge but the faithe of Martirius had imprinted OF SEVERVS A PRIESTE in the same Prouince CHAPTER XII IN the same countrye there is a valley vvhich is called of the plaine people Interocrina in vvhich there liued a certaine man of a rare life called Seuerus who was a Parishe priest of the churche of our blessed Lad●e the mother of God and perpetual virgin One that lay at the pointe of death sent for him in great hast desiringe him to come with all spede and by his praiers to make intercession for him that doing penance for his wickednes and loosed from his sinnes he mighte departe this life So it chaunced that the Priest at that tyme was busye in pruninge of his vines and therfore he bad them that came for him to go on before and I will quoth he come after by and by for seing he had but a little to do he staied a prety while to make an ende of that and when it was dispatched awaye he vvent to visit the sicke man but as he was goinge the former messengers mett with him sayinge Father why haue you staiede so longe Goe not nowe any further for the man is deade at which newes the goode man fell a tremblinge and cried out aloude that he had killed him wherevpon he fell a weeping and in that manner came to the deade corps where before the bedel he fell prostrat vpon the earth powringe out of teares Lyinge there weepinge very pitifully beatinge his heade against the grounde and crying out that he was guiltye of his deathe suddainly the dead man returned to life which many that were present beholdinge cried out and began to wepe more plentifully for ioye demandinge of him where he had bene and by what meanes he came backe againe to whom he saide Certaine cruel men quoth he did cary me away out of whose mouth nosetrills fire came forth which I coulde not endure and as they vvere leadinge me throughe darcke places suddainly a bevvtifull yonge man vvith others mett vs vvho saide vnto them that vvere dravvinge me forvvarde Cary him backe againe for Seuerus the priest lamenteth his deathe and our Lord for his teares hathe giuen him longer life Then Seuerus rose vp from the earthe and by his intercession did assist him in doinge of penance And vvhen the sicke man that reuiued had done penance for his synnes by the space of seuen daies vpon the eighte vvith a cherefull countenance he departed this life Consider Peter I praye you hovve derelie our lorde loued this Seuerus that vvolde not suffer him to be grieued for a little tyme. Peter They be maruailous strange thinges vvhich you reporte and which before this tyme I neuer hearde of but what is the reason that in these daies there be not any suche men nowe liuinge Gregory I make no doubt Peter but that there be many suche holy men now liuinge for thoughe they worcke not the like miracles yet for all that may they be as vertuous and as holye For true iudgement of ones life is to be taken from his vertuous conuersation and not from the worckinge of miracles for many there be who althoughe they do not any any suche strange thinges yet are they not in vertue inferior to them that do them Peter Howe I beseche you can it be maintayned for true that there be some that worcke not any miracles and yet be as vertuous as they which worcke them Gregory Suer I am that you knowe verye Peter chiefe of the Apostles wel that the Apostle S. Paul is brother to S. Peter chiefe of the Apostles in Apostolical principality Peter I knowe that in dede for no doubte can be made thereof for thoughe he were the least of the Apostles yet did he labour more then all they Gregory Peter as you well remember walked with his feete vpon the sea Paul in the sea suffred shipwracke And in one and the same element where Paul coulde not passe with a shipp Peter went vpon his feete by which apparāt it is that thoughe thiere vertue in worckinge of miracles was not alike yet thiere merit is alike in the kingdome of heauen Peter I confesse that I am well pleased with that you saye for I knowe most assuredlye that the life and not the miracles are to be considered but yet seinge such miracles as be wroughte do giue testimony of a goode life I beseche you yf any more be yet remayninge that you wolde with the examples and vertuous liues of holy men fcede myne hungrye soule Gregory Desirous I am to the honor of our blessed Sauiour to tell you some thinges now concerninge the miracles of the man of God venerable S. Bennet but to doe it as it oughte this daye is not sufficient wherfore we will here make a pause and to handle this matter more plentifully take an other beginninge The ende of the first booke THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE LIFE AND MIRACLES of S. Bennet THE CHAPTERS 1. HOw a ceue was broken
the mountaine not touching Marcius caue did skipp cleane ouer and auoidinge as it were to hurt Gods seruaunt it fell far of which thinge no man can doubte but that it was done by the handes of Angels at the commandement of almighty God At such tyme as this holy man came first to inhabit that mountaine and had not yet made any dore for his caue he fastned the one ende of an yron chaine to the stony wall and the other he tied to his legge to the end he mighte goe no further then the length of that chaine did giue him leaue which thinge the reuerent man Bennet hearinge of sent him this worde by one of his monkes yf thowe be Gods seruant let the chaine of Christ not any chaine of yron holde the vpon this message Marcius forthwith loosed his chaine yet did he keepe still the same compasse and goe no further then he did before Liuinge afterwarde in the same caue he began to entertaine certaine disciples which dwelt apart from his cell who hauing no other water but that which with a rope and a bucket they drewe out of a well great trouble they had because theire rope did often breake and therfore they came vnto him crauinge that chaine which he had loosed from his legge that they mighte tye the rope to that and fasten the bucket vpon it and from that tyme forwarde thoughe the rope was daily wett with Vertue of relickes water yet did it breake no more for hauing touched the holy mans chaine it became stronge like vnto yron so that the water did not weare it nor do it any harme Peter These worthy actes of his doe please me seinge they are straunge that very much because they were so lately done and be yet freshe in memorye HOVV A MONKE OF MOVNTE Argentario raised vp a deade man CHAPTER XVII Gregory NOt longe since in our tyme a certain man called Quadragessimus was Subdeaco● in the churche of Buxentin who in tymes past kept a flocke of sheepe in the same countrye of Aurelia by whose faithfull reporte I vnderstoode a maruailous strange thinge which is this At such tyme as he lead a sheapherdes life there was an holy mā that dwelt in the mountaine of Argentario whose religious conuersation and inward vertue was answerable to Habit of monkes the habit of a mōke which outwardly he did weare Euerye yeare he trauailed Pilgrimage from his mountaine to the churche of S. Peter Prince of the Apostles and S. Peter Prince of the Apostles in the waye tooke this Quadragessimus house for his lodginge as him selfe did tell me Comminge vpon a daye to his house which was harde by the churche a poore womans husbande died not far of whom when they had as the manner is washed put on his garmentes and made him ready to be buried The manner of burieng in Italye yet it was so late that it could not be done that daye wherfore the desolat widowe satt by the deade corps weepinge all nighte longe and to sasatisfye her griefe she did continually lament and crye out The man of God seeinge her so pitifully to weepe and neuer to giue ouer was nuche grieued and saide to Quadragesimus the Subdeacon my soule taketh compassion of this womans sorrowe arise I beseche you and let vs praye and therevpon they went to the churche which as I said was harde by and fel to theire deuotions And when thy had praied a good while the seruaunt of God desired Quadragessimus to conclude theire praier which beeinge done he tooke a little dust from the side of the altar and so came with Quadragessimus to the dead bodye and there he began againe to praye and when he continewed so a longe tyme he desirede him not as he did before to conclude theire praiers but him selfe gaue the blessing and so rose vp and because he had the dust in his righte hande with his left he tooke awaye the cloth that couered the deade mans face which the woman seeing earnestlie withstoode him and maruailed much what he ment to do when the cloth was gone he rubbed the deade mans face a goode while withe the dust which he had taken vp and at length he that was deade receiued his soule againe began to open his mouth and his eies and to sitt vp and as thoughe he had awaked from a deepe sleepe maruailed what they did about him which when the woman that had weried her selfe with cryinge behelde she began then a freshe to weepe for ioye and crye out far louder then she did before but the man of God modestlye forbad her sayinge Peace goode woman and say nothinge and yf any demaunde howe this happened say only that our Lorde Iesus Christ hath vouchsafed to worcke his pleasure Thus he spake and forthwith he departed from Quadragessimus and neuer came to his house againe For desirous to auoide all temporall honour he so handled the matter that they which sawe him worcke that miracle did neuer see him more so longe as he liued Peter What other thincke I knowe not but myne oplnion is that it is a miracle aboue all miracles to raise vp deade men and secretlye to call backe theire soules to giue life vnto theire bodies againe Gregory Yf we respecte outwarde and visible thinges of necessitye we must so beleeue but yf we turne our eies to inuisible thinges then certaine it is that it is a greater miracle by preaching of the worde vertue of praier to conuert a sinner then to raise vp a deade man for in the one that fleshe is raised vp which againe shall dye but in the other he is broughte from death which shall liue for euer For I will name you two and tell me in which of them as you thincke the greater miracle was wroughte The first is Lazarꝰ a true beleeuer whom our Lorde raised vp in fleshe the other is Saul whom our Lorde raised in soule For of Lazarus vertues after his resurrection we reade nothinge but after the raisinge vp of the others soule we are not able to conceiue what wonderful thinges be in holy scripture spoken of his vertues as that his most cruell thoughtes and designements were turned to the bowels of piety and compassion that he desired to dy for his brethen in whose death before he tooke muche pleasure That knowinge the holy scriptures perfectly yet professed that he knew nothinge els but Iesus Christ and him crucified That he did willingly endure the bearing of roddes for Christ whom before with sworde he did persecute That he was exalted to the dignitye of an Apostle yet willingly became a little one in the middest of other disciples That he was rapte to the secretes of the thirde heauen and yet did turne his eye of compassion to dispose of the dutye of married folkes sayinge Let the husband Corint render debt to the wife and the wife likewise to the husbande That he was busied in contemplatinge
monkes who they were that should shortly dy out of the Monasterye adding also that him selfe was to followe them The next day the foresaide monkes fell more dangerously sicke and so died all in that verye order which they were named in the bill Last of all him selfe also departed this life who hade foretold the departure of thee other monkes before him Likewise in that mortalitye which three years since lamentablye afflicted this towne there was in the Monasterye of the citye of Portua a yonge monke called Mellitus a man of wonderfull simplicitye and humilitye whose last daye being come he fell desperatlye sicke of the common disease which when venerable Felix Bishop of the same place vnderstoode by whose relation my selfe haue learned this storye verye carefull he was to visit him and with sweete wordes to comfort him against death adding not-withstandinge that by Gods grace he mighte liue longe in this worlde To whom the sicke man answered that his tyme was at hande saying that there came vnto him a yonge man with letters willing him to open and reade them which when he had done he saide that he founde both his owne name and all the rest of them which the Easter before had bene baptized by that Bishop written in letters of golde and first of all he saide that he founde his owne name and afterwarde the rest of them that were christned at that tyme by which he made no doubt but that both him selfe and the rest shoulde shortly depart this life and so it fell out for he died that very daye and after him followed all those which had before benebaptised so that within the space of a fewe daies no one of them was left aliue Of whom no question can be made but that the reason why the foresaide seruaunt of God saw them written in gold was because theire names were written in heauen in the euer lasting sighte of God And as these men by diuine reuelation knewe and foretolde such thinges as were to come so sometymes soules before theire departure not in a dreame but waking may haue some taste of heauenly mysteries For you were well acquainted with Ammonius a monke of my Monasterye who whiles he liued in a secular vveede and vvas Secular weede● married to the daughter of Valerianus a lavvyer in this citye continuallye and vvith all diligence he follovved his busines by reason vvhereof he knevve vvhatsoeuer vvas done in his father in lawes house This man tolde me hovv in that great mortalitye vvhich happened in this citye in the tyme of that noble man Narsus there vvas a boye in the house of the foresaide Valerianus called Armentarius vvho vvas verye simple and passing humble when therfore that mortall disease entred that lawyers house the foresaide boy fell sicke thereof and was brought to the pointe of death who suddainly falling into a traunce and afterward comming to him selfe againe caused his master to be sent for to whom he told that he had bene in heauen and did knowe who they were that should dy out of his house Such and such quoth he shall dye but as for your selfe feare nothinge for at this tyme dy you shall not And that you may be assured that I haue verily bene in heauen beholde I haue there receiued the gift to speake with all tongues you knowe well ynoughe that ignorant I am of the greke tongue and yet will I speake greeke that you may see whether it be true that I saye or no. Then his master spake greke and he so answered him in that tongue that all which were present did much maruaile In the same house there was a Vulga● seruant to the foresaide Narsus who in all hast being brought to the sicke person spake vnto him in the Vulgarian tongue and the boye that was borne and broughte vp in Italye answered him so in that barbarous language as thoughe he had bene borne and bredd in that countrye All that hearde him thus talking wondred much and by experience of two tongues which they knewe very well that before he knewe not they made no doubt of the rest thoughe they could make no trial thereof After this he liued tvvo daies and vpon the thirde by vvhat secret iudgement of God none can tell he tare and rent vvith his teth his ovvne handes and armes and so departed this life When he was deade all those whom before he mentioned did quicklye follow after and besides them none in that house died at that tyme. Peter A verye terrible thinge it is that he which merited so great a grace should be punnished with so pitifull a death Gregory Who is able to enter into the secret iudgements of God Wherfore those thinges which in diuine examination we can not comprehend we ought rather to feare then curiouslye to discusse OF THE DEATH OF THE Earle Theophanius CHAPTER XXVII ANd to prosecute what we haue already begun concerning the propheticall knowledge of those that dye I will nowe tell you that which when I was in the citye of Centumcellis I vnderstoode by the relatiō of many touching Theophanius Earle of that place For he was a man of great mercye and compassion and one that did many goode worckes but especiallye he was giuen to goode house-keeping and hospitalitye True it is that following the affaires of his Earldom he spent much tyme about earthly and worldlye busines but that rather of necessitye and duty then according to his owne minde and desire as his vertuous ende afterwarde declared For when the tyme of his death was come there arose a great tempest which was likelye to hinder the funeralles where at his wife pitifullye weeping asked him in this manner what shall I do or how shall we carye you to be buried seing the tempest is so terrible that none can stir out of doores To whom he answered thus weepe not good wife for so sone as I am deade you shall haue faire wether and when he had so saide he gaue vp the ghost and straighte-waies the aier became clere and the tempest ceased after this miracle one or tvvo more follovved For vvhereas his handes and feete vvere vvith the goute before svvolne and festered and by reason of much corrupt matter did sauour and smell yet vvhen he vvas dead and his body after the manner came to be vvashed they founde his handes and feete so sounde and vvhole as though they had neuer bene trobled vvith any such sores at all Fovver daies after his burial his vvife vvas desirous to haue the marble stone that lay vpon him changed vvhich being done such a fragrant and pleasant smell came from his bodye as thoughe in steade of wormes spices had sprunge out of that corrupt carcasse of which strange thinge when I did in my Homelies make publicke mention and certaine incredulous persons doubted thereof vpon a daye as I was sitting in the companye of diuers noble men those very vvorkmen which had changed the tombe stone came vnto me about busines of
none can be deuised and therefore thosE that will doubtfully descant of his stories will hardly euer beleeue any further then shall please their owne humor for a more certayne and sure course can not be deuised neither do I remember the like to haue bene so obserued of any other auncient histriographers whatsoeuer And surely those which be so captious as to controll what fitteth not their fancy woulde I make no doubte as liberally speake their pleasure as in truth some in like cases haue and deliuer their quicke censure against many stories no lesse strange then any reported by S. Gregory who yet when they shall vnderstand from whence they be taken must of necessity vaile bonnet condemne them selues sor too lauish of tongue or desperatly fall to gracelesse infidelity or Atheisme For example tell them that there was a certayne barren woman which receiued a message from God by an Angell con●erning the bringing forth of a sonne who should be consecrated to God from his infancy which falling out accordingly and he comming ●o mans estate slewe him selfe alone with the iawe bone of an asse many hundreds of his enemies that sett vpon him and afterward being passing thirsty and in great extremity for lacke of water he praied to God and suddainely a fountaine sprung out of one of the great teeth of the saide iawe bone by meanes whereof he was refreshed and recouered his former strength Tell this story I say to many Protestantes that knowe not with what infallible authority it is backed and a man had nede of a broade backe to bare the frumppes and scoffes which they will loade vpon him for giuing credit to such an olde wiues tale and yet in fine their chekes must consesse their incredulous folly yf any christian bloud be left when they shall know that it is recorded by the holy Ghost in sacred scripture Ind. cap. 13. and cap. 15. Iosue cap. 10. v. 12. The like affections will they shewe and the same liberty of speech will they vse to heare that at the commandement of an holy man the sunne did stoppe his course and for some time stoode still that the iron heade of an hatchet was made by an other to ascende of it selfe from the bottome of the water 4. Reg. 6. v. 6. and to swimme in the toppe that a great seruant of God did many hundreds of yeares after his death appeare in body to Math. 17. v. 3. an other and talke with him in the presence of diuers that there were two famous and holy preachers which wrought such wounderfull miracles that the very shadowe of the Act. 5. v. 15. Act. 19. v. 12. one cured all sicke persons ouer whom it passed and the napkins of the other brought from his body healed diseases and dispossessed deuils These and such like be as strange and far more incredible then any reported in this booke and therefore will they as quickly be reiected for fables of many that heare them vntill they vnderstand that Gods worde doth giue them authority Yf then such miracles as these find credit at the Protestants handes why shoulde they contemne those here mentioned being in them selues no more strange or improbable especially our Sauiour him selfe hauing made this promise to his Church Amen Amen I say to Ioan. 14. v. 12. you he that beleueth in me the workes that I do he also shall do and greater then these shall he do Lib. de Babila Martiri which S. Chrisostome in an whole booke against the Pagans writeth to haue bene fullfilled not only in Peters shadowe Pauls garments which as we reade in the Acts of the Apostles healed Act. 19. v. 12. infirmities but also by the relicks and monuments of Saints and namely of S. Babilas of whom he there intreateth Seing then we finde such wonderfull thinges wrought in the time of the olde testament and in the Gospell by our Sauiour as that the very touching of the Math. 14. 2. 36. hemme of his garment cured infirmities and him selfe assuresh vs that such as bel●ued in him should worke greater what reason is there to discredit those thinges that are reported by auncient holy and learned men for as to beleeue vncertayne legendes and apocriphall stuffe not commended to vs by any sufficient authority is not commendable bnt an argument of ignorance or great leuity so to be so straight laced as not to credit that which is published by them that be of knowne antiquity learning and vertue and haue besides vsed all those meanes which mans witt can deuise is passing iniurious to Godes Saints openeth the gate to the vtter deniall of all monuments of antiquity and all stories of former times whatsoeuer and is in very truth not to say more a plaine demonstration at least of a cauilling complexion For more light of that which hath bene saide let vs a litle descende to somewhat in particular S. Gregory in this thrid booke Cap. 15. telleth how an holy monke called Florentius liued a solirary life whose cell vpon a time was enuironed with a huge number of snakes which yet God at the praiers of his seruant destroied with a tempest and afterward by his diuine prouidence caused to be caried away by a great multitude of birds The story by some may be thought ridiculous and altogether incredible and perchance not many in all his booke more improbable yet no reason ouerhastily to censure so worthy a man as thereporter was to seede our owne foolish fancy more zealous of Gods glory I thinke we be not then he was nor more sharpe of iudgement to discerne betwixt truth and falshoode nor yet more religious to auoide fabulous relations why then should we be so captious or curious as to doubt of that whereof he made no scruple at all Doth he not also note by what meanes he came to the knowledge thereof which was not by any vncertayne rumor or flying tale but from the mouth as him selfe saith of a vertuous and faithfull Priest called Sanctusus who dwelt in the same prouince of Valeria where Florentius also led his life and where ●he foresaide miracle happened By all which who seeth not that none can with any colour of reason quarrell at the truth of his narration And that Gods pleasure vouch saseth sometymes in such small thinges as these to shew his power for the honour of his seruants we learne out of holy scripture For not only a small pece of groūde as in this our case nor an whole towne or prouince but almost all the country of Egipt was pestered with fragges and the face of the earth so couered with locusts that they did cōsume and spoile all herbes and fruits of trees which yet at the intercession of Moises were Exod. cap. 8. and cap. 10. all by a westerne winde cast into the sea so that not one remayned in all that lande And not only in Gods word but also in our owne chronicles and that yet fresh in memory we reade of as prodigious a thinge
thinges as I had from the mouthe of his owne scollers mentioned before in the beginninge of this booke A certaine man there was who had an enemie that did notably spite and maligne him whose damnable hatred proceded so far that he poisoned his drincke which althoughe it killed him not yet did it chaunge his skinne in such sort that it was of many colours as thoughe he had bene infected with a leprosy but the mā of God restored him to his former helthe for so sone as he touched him forthwith all that varietye of colours departed from his bodye HOVV A CRVET OF GLAS was throwne vpon the stones and not broken CHAPTER XXVIII AT suche tyme as there was a great dearthe in Campania the man of God had giuen away all the wealth of the Abbey to poore people so that in the celler there was no thinge lefte but a little oile in a glasse A certaine subdeacon called Agapitus came vnto him instantly crauinge that he wolde bestowe a little oile vpon him Our Lordes seruaunt that was resolued to giue away all vpon earth that he mighte finde all in heauen commanded that oile to be giuen him but the monke that kep●e the celler hearde what the father commaunded yet did he not performe it● Who inquiringe not longe after whether he had giuen that which he willed the monke tolde him that he had not adding that yf he had giuen it away that there was not any lefte for the Conuer●t Then in an anger he comaunded others to take that glasse with the oile and to throwe it out at the windovve to the end that nothinge mighte remayne in the Abbey contrary to obedience The monkes did so and threwe it out at a windowe vnder which there was an huge downefall full of roughe and craggye stones vpon which the glasse did lighte but yet continewed for all that so sounde as thoughe it had neuer bene throwne out at all for neither the glasse was broken nor any of the oile shedde Then the man of God did commande it to be taken vp againe and whole as it was to be giuen vnto him that desired it and in the presence of the other brethren he reprehended the disobedient monke both for his infidelity and also for his proud mynde HOVV AN EMPTYE BARRELL was filled with oile CHAPTER XXIX AFter which reprehension with the rest of his brethren he sell to prayinge and in the place where they were there stoode an empty barrell with a couer vpon it and as the holy man continewed in his praiers the oile within did so increase that the couer began to be lifted vp and at lengthe fell downe and the oile that was nowe higher then the mouthe of the barrell began to runne ouer vpon the pauiment which so sone as the seruaūt of God Bennet behelde forth with he gaue ouer his praiers and the oile likewise ceased to ouerflow the barrel Then did he more at large admonish that mistrustinge and disobedient monke that he wolde learne to haue faithe and humilitye who vpon so holsome an admonition was ashamed because the venerable father had by miracle showne the power of almighty God as before he tolde him when he did first rebuke him and so no cause there was why any sholde afterward doubt of his promise seeinge at one and the same tyme for a small glasse almost emptye which he gaue awaye he bestowed vpon them an whole barrell full of oile HOVV BENNET DELIVERED a monke from a deuill CHAPTER XXX VPon a certaine tyme as he was goinge to the oratory of S. Iohne which is in the topp of the mountaine the olde enemy of mankinde vpon a mule like a phisition met him caryinge in his hand an horne and a morter And when he demanded whether he was goinge To your monkes quoth he to giue them a drench The venerable father went forwarde to his praiers and when he had done he returned in all hast but the wicked spirit founde an olde monke drawinge of water in to whom he entred and straight-waies cast him vpon the ground and grieuously tormented him The man of God comminge from his praiers and seeinge him in such pitifull case gaue him only a little blowe with his hande and at the same instant he cast out that cruell deuill so that he durst not any more presume to enter in Peter I wolde gladly knowe whether he obtained alwaies by praier to worcke suche notable miracles or els sometymes did them only at his will and pleasure Gregory Suche as be the deuoute serua●ntes of God when necessity require●● vse to worcke miracles both manner of wayes so that sometyme they estecte wonderfull thinges by theire praiers and sometyme only by theire power and authoritye for S. Iohne saithe So Iohn 1. many as receiued him he gaue them power to be made the sonnes of God They then that by power be the sonnes of God what maruaile is it yf by power they be able to doe wonderfull thinges And that both waies they worcke miracles Act. 9. Act. 5. we learne of S. Peter who by his praiers did raise vp Tabitha and by his sharpe reprehension did sentence Ananias and Saphira to death for theire ●yinge For we reade not that in the death of them he praied at all but only rebuked them for that synne which they had committed Certaine therfore it is that sometymes they do these thinges by power and sometymes by praier for Ananias and Saphira by a seuere rebuke S. Peter depriued of life and by praier restored Tabitha to life And for prooffe of this I will now tell you of two miracles which the faithfull seruaunt of God Bennet did in which it shall appeare most plainlye that he wroughte the one by that power which God gaue him and obtained the other by vertue of his praiers OF A COVNTRY FELLOVVE that with the only sighte of the man of God was loosed from his bandes CHAPTER XXXI A Certaine Goth there was called Galla an Arrian he retike who in the tyme of kinge Totilas did with suche monstrous crueltye persecute religious men of the Catholike church that what Priest or monke soeuer came in his presence he neuer departed aliue This man on a certaine daye sett vpon rapin and pillage pitifully tormented a poore countrye man to make him confesse where his money and wealthe was who ouercome with extremitye of paine saide that he had committed all his substance to the custodye of Bennet the seruaunt of God and this he did to the end that his tormenter giuinge credit to his wordes mighte at least for a while surcease from his horrible crueltye Galla hearinge this tormented him no longer but binding his armes fast with stronge cordes draue him before his horse to bring him vnto this Bēnet who as he saide had his wealth in keepinge The country fellowe thus pinyoned and runninge before him carried him to the holy mans Abbey where he founde him sittinge before the gate readinge vpon a booke
body which by meanes of the bodye it had often tymes before sene to the end that we should thereby vnderstanne whether his soule mighte spiritually be carried And in that he saide he was to goe into Sicily what els can be ment therebye but that there be in the Ilandes of that countrye more then in any place els certayne gaping gulphes of tormentes castinge out fire continually And as they say that knowe them dailye do they wax greater and enlarge them selues so that the worlde drawinge to an ende and so consequently more comming thither to be burnt in those flaminge dungeons so much the more do those places of tormentes open and become wider Which strange thing almighty God for the terror and amendement of the liuing wolde haue extant in this world that infidels which beleeue not the vnspeakable paines of hell may with their eies see the places of tormentes which they list not to credit when it is told them And that both the elect and reprobat whose life and conuersation hath bene alike shal after death be carried to like places the sayinge of our Sauiour doth teach vs thoughe we had no examples to proue the same for of the elect him selfe saith in the Gospell In the house of my father Ioan. 14. Inequality of rewardes in heauen there be many mansions For yf there were not inequalitye of rewardes in the euerlasting felicitye of heauen then were there not many mansions but rather one wherfore there be many mansions in which diuers orders and degrees of Gods sainctes be distinguished who in common do all reioice of the society and fellowship of theire merites and yet all they that labored receiue one penny thoughe they remayne in distinct mansions because the felicitye and ioye which there they possesse is one and the rewarde which by diuers and vnequall good Worckes they receiue is not one but diuers which to be true our Sauiour assureth vs when talkinge of his comminge to iudgement he saith Then I wil say to the Math. 13. reapers Gather vp the cockle and binde it into bundels to burne For the Angels w●ich be the reapers do then binde vp in bundles the cockle to burne when like with like are putt together in tormentes as the proude to burne in hell with the proude carnall with the carnall couetous with the couetous deceiptfull with the deceiptfull inuious with the inuious and infidels with insidels when therfore those that were like in sinfull life be condemned to like tormentes then be they as it were cockle bounde together in bundels to be burnte Peter You haue giuen a sufficient reason for satisfaction to my demande yet I beseech you to informe me further what the cause is that some be called out of this vvorlde as it vvere throughe error vvho aftervvarde returne againe to life saying that they hearde hovv they vvere not the men vvhich vvere sent for out of this life OF THOSE SOVLES VVHICH seme as it were throughe error to be taken out of theire bodies and of the deathe and reuiuinge of a monke called Peter of the death likewise and raising vp againe of one Steuen and of the strange vision of a certaine soldiar CHAPTER XXXVI Gregory VVHen this happeneth Peter it is not yf it be vvell considered any error but an admonition For God of his great and bountifull mercy so disposeth that some after theire death do straighte-vvaies returne againe to life that hauing seene the tormentes of hell vvhich before vvhen they hearde they vvolde not beleeue they may novv at least treble at after they haue vvith theire eyes beheld them For a certaine Sclauonian vvho vvas a monke and hued vvith me here in this city in my Monasterye vsed to tell me that at such tyme as he dvvelt in the vvildernes that he knevve one Peter a monke borne in Spaine vvho liued vvith him in the vast desert called Euasa vvhich Peter Eremites as he saide tolde him how before he came to dwell in that place by a certaine sicknes he died and was straightwaies restored to life againe affirming that he had sene the tormentes and innumerable places of hell and diuers who were mighty men in this vvorlde hanging in those flames and that as him selfe was caried to be throwne also into the same fire suddainly an Angel in a be wtifull attire appeared who wolde not suffre him to be cast into those tormentes but spake vnto him in this manner Go thy way backe againe and hereafter carefully looke vnto thy selfe how thow leadest thy life after which wordes his body by little and little became warme and him selfe waking out of the slepe of euerlasting death reported all such thinges as happened about him after which tyme he bounde him selfe to such fasting and watchinge that thoughe he had saide nothing yet his very life and conuersation did speake vvhat tormentes he had sene and was affraide of and so Gods mercifull prouidence wroughte in his temporall death that he died not euerlastinglye But because mans harte is passing obdurat and harde hereof it commeth that thoughe others haue the like vision and see the same paines yet do they not alwaies reape the like profit For the honorable man Steuen whom you knevve very vvell tolde me of him selfe that at such tyme as he vvas vpon busines resident in the city of Gonstantinople that he fell sicke and died and vvhen they sought for a surgeon to bovvell him and to embalme his bodye and coulde not get any he laye vnburied all the nighte follovving in vvhich space his soule vvas carried to the dungeon of hell vvhere he savve many thinges vvhich before when he heard he little beleeued But vvhen he vvas broughte before the iudge that satt there he vvolde not admitt him to his presence sayinge I commanded not this man to be broughte but Steuen the smith vpon which wordes he was straighte-way restored to life and Steuen the smith that dwelled harde by at that very houre departed this life whose death did showe that the wordes which he heard were most true But thoughe the foresaide Steuen escaped death in this manner at that tyme yet three yeares since in that mortalitye vvhich lamentably vvasted this citye and in vvhich as you knovve men vvith theire corporall eies did behold arrovves that came from heauen vvhich did strike diuers the same man ended his daies at vvhich tyme a certaine soldiar being also broughte to the pointe of death his soule vvas in such sort caried cut of his bodye that he lay voide of all sence and feelinge but comminge quickely againe to him selfe he tolde then that vvere present vvhat present vvhat strange th●nges he had sene For he saide as many report that knowe it very well that he sawe a bridge vnder which a blacke and smoakye riuer did runne that had a filthy and intollerable smell but vpon the further side thereof there were pleasant grene medowes full of swete flowers in which also there were diuers companies of men
reade these here mentioned for that I haue passed ouer so many other with silence which they know no lesse then my selfe whome at this time I beseech to pardon me and to thinke with them selues what a labour it is to performe that which the necessity of the worke taken in hand compelleth me not to performe For if I should write only of the miraculous cures to omitt all other which haue bene wrought by this glorious martyr Steuen in the Colony of Chalama as also in oures it would require many bookes and yet all could not be gathered together but only those of which certificates haue bene giuen to the end they might be read to the people for we tooke order to haue it so done for as much as miracles also in our tymes like vnto those of former dayes haue bene wrought which vve thinke very conuenient that they should come to the knowledge of many And it is not two yeares since that this shrine began to be at Kings Hippo and many vvhich vve knovv most certaynly gaue no certificates in vvritinge of such miracles as happened and yet when I wrott this the number of them vvhich haue bene giuen came almost to seauenty But at Chalama vvhere his shrine vvas before and vvhere such billes or certificates be oftner deliuered in they be incomparably far more We knowe also that at Vzalis which is a colony not far from Vtica many notable things haue bene done by the same martyr S. Steuen vvhose shrine vvas there set vp by Bishop Euodius lōg before it vvas here vvith vs but there they vse not to keepe a register of the miracles or rather in times past they did not but now they beginne to do it For at my being there vvihch vvas not long since both my selfe and the Bishoppe of the same place did persvvade the Lady Petronia a noble woman who was there miraculously cured of a great long disease about which many Phisitians had laboured in vaine that she would giue vp in writinge a publike testimonial of the miracle that it might be readde to the people which most obediently she performed wherin also she putt downe that which though I make hast forward yet I can not omitt She sayd therfore that she was perswaded by a certayn Iewe to put a ring on a girdle made of heare and to tye that about her next vnto her bare body and that vnder the gemme of the ring she should put a stone that was found in the reines of an oxe hauinge tyed this about her as a remedy for her disease forth she went to the shrine of the martyr and departing from Carthage she lodged all night at her owne mannor in the confines of the riuer Bagrada and rising vp in the morning to go forward on her iorney she espied the ring lying vpon the ground before her feete where at some-what amazed she felt vppon the girdle and finding that as it was before with all the knotts fast tyed she suspected that the ringe had bene broken and so slipped out but findinge that also safe and sound then she presumed that by so notable a miracle she had almost a pledg of her future recouery where vpō she loosed that girdle together with the ring threw it into the riuer They will not beleeue this which beleeue And in this number be many Protestantes not that our Lord Iesus Christ was brought forth without any detrement to his mothers virginity and that he entred into his disciples the dores being shutt but let them enquire the truth of this relation and yf they finde it to be as I haue reported then let them beleeue those other things to be most true the woman is honorable of an honorable parentage and honorably maried She dwelt in Carthage which is a great city and she of great nobilitie Such things as these suffer not such a miracle as this to be vnknowne The martyr himselfe by whose intercession she was cured beleeued in the sonne of her that remayned a virgin beleeued in him who entred into his disciples the dores being shutt Finally which is the cause why I haue made rehear sale of all these things he beleeued in him who in that flesh ascended vp into heauen in which he rose from death and therfore by him so many miracles are wrought because for his faith he shedd his bloud One miracle there is which was done here amonge vs I say not greater then the former recited but so famous and well knovvne that I thinke there is none dwelling in Hippo but eyther did se it or at least hath heard there of neyther is it possible that any can euer forgett it Seuen brothers and three sisters there were all children of one man borne at Cesarea in the countrie of Cappadocia of a good family whom the mother straight vppon the death of their father did curse for a certayne iniury which they offered her and which she tooke passing heauylye Whervpon God punished them with such a pittifull palsye that they did most horribly shake vpon which lamentable chance being ashamed to remayne where they were knowne they departed for diuers countries wādring vp and downe throuhhout the whole Romaine Empire and at length two of them the brother and the sister called Paulus and Palladia came into this our countrie being before wel known to many other places for their markable miserye and they arriued here about fifteene dayes before Easter not ceasinge dayly to goe to the Church in which also they did frequent the shrine of the glorious martyr S. Steuen where they did earnestly pray that God would pardon their sinnes be reconciled to his wre●ched seruants and at length restore vnto them their former health And both there and wheresoeuer they went the people marueyled and gazed vpon them and such as before had sene them in other places and knew both them and the cause of their lamentable shakinge made the matter known to so many as they could When Easter day was come the young man early in the morninge went to the Chruch being already full of people and laying hold as he prayed vppon the bar●es of that holy place where the shrine was suddenly he fell prostrate and lay as though he had bene a sleepe yet without any trembling or shaking at all which before he did also wh●n he slept The people present some were amazed some afrayd some grieued and one amongst the rest being about to lift him vp others would not suffer him but thought it better to expect to see what would become of him and behould after he had remayned in that manner some litle time he rose vp without any shaking at all being now safe and sound stoode amongst them in perfect health behoulding them that marueiled at him Who was then present that looked vppon him and sawe what was done that did not magnifie and prayse Gods name And the Church on all sides did rebound with noyse the people cryed so out and