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A16809 A defense and declaration of the Catholike Churchies [sic] doctrine, touching purgatory, and prayers for the soules departed. by William Allen Master of Arte and student in diuinitye Allen, William, 1532-1594. 1565 (1565) STC 371; ESTC S100096 197,625 592

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whrereupon Goddes truethe standethe Handeling then oure good men as S. Augustine did the lyke say to theyme bouldely that the same Churche which exhortethe the people to pray sor the misbeleeuers doothe geue vs example to pray for the soules departed Vitalis and Pelagius were haeretikes for withstanding the one they must needes be as very haeretikes for refusing the other It was the greatest extremitie that Pelagius could be driuen to by force of Augustines argument to mocke at the priestes prayer made at goddes altare and that which then was so foule an absurditye for those faulse teachers can it-be borne out of oures withe honestie Vitalis the Pelagian had a foule foyle by S. Augustine when he charged him with the contēpt of S. Cyprians authoritye Bisshoppe of Carthage being him sellfe a chyeld of the same Church And shall they go away so smouthly nowe adaies not only with contempt of theire own Englishe patrons and Apostles but with impudent deniall of al the doctors at once that euer were gydes of goddes Churche sith Christes faithe was taught It was of Augustine coūted a singulare arrogācy not to praie in that forme as goddes church and ministers at the altare both praie theim selues and exhorte other to pray and shal it be such praise for our preachers to erecte a newe seruice to be checke mate with the oulde to cōtroele the rites and vsage of solempne supplication in all coontryes Christianed and withe the true woorship to banishe together our fathers faithe I would learne by what Churchies example they haue letfe oute of theire newe fangled phantasticall seruice the offering and praying for the departed One of theyme was so inpudent to say in an open booke that the lyturgies of the fathers made all against the Catholikes and for the proufe of theire faulse assertions Where in sir I pray yow tel-me I would call yowe by your name if I knewe who you were ▪ there you were ashamed of yowr own name I gesse it vvas M. Pilkington of Duresm therfor ye shal lacke the glory of your assertiō But who so euer yow be I pray yowe what affinitie betwixt their office of celebratiō and yours doo yow finde they offer the holy hoste they worship it they shewe it they pray vnto it which of all these doo yowe they blesse it withe the signe of the holy crosse they practise the action vpon an altare how wel folowe yowe these they pray for the deade they make inuocatiō solempnely to sanctes they ioyne with all catholike churcheis in the worlde where is your cause here amēded or oures not plainely proued If theire seruice like yowe so well or at least better then S. Gregories Masse yowe might withe more honestie haue cosed for any one of theim then haue forged a newe one of your owne which in deede is directly repugnaunt to all other rites in the Christian worlde Which yow may wel terme the seruice of contradiction and damnation as one that nether communicateth with the sanctes in heauen with the soules in purgatory nor with the faithfull a liue And being ashamed of the Latine Church yow chalenge an other origine of faith owt of the Easte parte as thoughe your matter wer wel amended if yowe might shake of that faithe and worship which oure contrie in her conuersion first receiued and in which till this day she hathe happely lyued and make the heade of oure holy tradition vncertaine by referring vs vnto an vnknowen origine Euery mā in the primitiue churche counted the spring of his faith more pure and agreate deal more cleare if he could ageinst an haeretike declare by good testimony that his beliefe did at lengthe by iust counte faule into the Romane church So dothe Irenaeus ageinst the Valentinians so doothe Cyprian ageinst the Nouatiās so doth Tertulian and Vincentius ageinst all haeretikes so doothe Augustin and Optatus ageinst the Donatistes so dothe Hierom and all the reste ageinst the Arians All these thought they had a greate vauntage if they cowld by plaine accompt proue ageinst an haeretike that theire doctrine isshued from the bishop of Rome Go whether thowe wilt saithe Tertulian and thow shalt finde sum apostolik seat to instruct thy conscience De prescri aduers haereti thowe hast harde by the Philippos or Ephesus or Rome and there lo fetche we the authority of oure faithe S. Augustine that knewe best howe to fetche an haeterike ouer the coles Epist 165 vrgethe him euer to reduce his doctrine to sum bishop of Rome whē he had him once at that strait then lo he goethe throughe the whole ranke of holy Bishoppes by name to the nōber of xlty wel neare Bring me once an euident declaration that your faithe isshued from any one bishoppe of that sea and then yowe may passe throwe the longe lyne of that succession with owte bracke or any rupture in the world I could make accompt saith Irenaeus of many successions of Apostolik churches but that were to longe onely Rome shal serue that is the greatest the auncientst and best knowne Lib. 3. ca. 3 and by the tradition of that churche confundimus omnes eos we vtterly confownde all haeretikes It is a straunge thing that the fathers hauing store of Apostolike successions did euer chuese owte for the warrant of theire faithe from emongest the rest the Roman seate And nowe when ther is no apostolike churche lefte in the whole world but it that they will seeke to churchies wherof there is nether certaynty Note nor succession when by plaine open dealing we may reduce and most needes referre our faithe to that which was euer of all other most farre from faulshood Bring my faithe once to S. Gregory and the very streame shall driue me to S. Peter and Paule maugre al theire beardes In which ordre of Bishops finde me one that setforthe by decrie any practise of contrary doctrine to that which is next praedecessor did before him mayteine and I will go seeke with the stray a new moother Churche to fownde my faith vpon Yf all be in this succession salfe and sownde what a folly wer it to forsake oure owne mother and springe of our beliefe to seeke other which haue often erred when they stoode and now be almost wholy decaide But yet it is wisdō for fallse teachers with all force to flie from so greate light as may arise to the trueth by the recognising of that sownd succession and going the iuste contrarye way from the oulde doctors faithe it is not to be thought straunge that they directly seeke to ouer throwe that bulwarck which they euer leaned vnto in the stormes of schisme and haeresie The shrewes doo knowe full wel the might of truethe in that seate and succession to haue beaten downe all theire forefathers the haeretikes of all agies They feare theire faule whose steppes they follow They vtter muche malice and tormēt theim selfe in euery sermō in vaine that Church feeleth no sore but in
A DEFENSE AND DECLARATION OF THE CATHOLIKE CHVRCHIES DOCTRINE touching Purgatory and prayers for the soules departed ▪ by WILLIAM ALLEN Master of Arte and student in Diuinitye Mortuo ne prohibeas gratiam Eccles 7. Hinder not the departed of grace and fauoure AGRICOLAS SPES ALIT Imprinted at Antwerp by Iohn Latius with Priuilege Anno. 1565. REgiae Maiestatis Priuilegio permissum est Gulielmo Alle●o ●tium Magistro sacr● Theologiae candidato vti per aliquem Typographorū admissorum impune ●iliceat imprimi curare per omnes su●editionis Regiones distr●bere Libru● inscriptum ● Defense of the Catholike Churches doctrine touching Purgatory cae omnibus alijs inhibitum ne eundem absque eiusdem Gulielmi consensu impriman vel alibi impressum distrahant sub p●na in Priuilegio contenta Dat●● Bruxellae 14. Martij Anno. 1564. Stilo Brabantiae Subsig N. de Zoete TO THE READER A Frend of myne very studious of the truethe and zelous of Goddes hovvse one that learned to beleue first and then sought to vnderstand aftervvard vvhiche I take to be the natural ordre of a Christian schoole vvhere faith must in most matters directe re●n and leade the vvay to vnderstanding asked of me as of ●●e vvhome he hartely loued and knevv to be studious in such matters by my trade of lyfe vpon vvhat grovvndes the Churches doctrine and the Christian peoples faith of Purgatory ar● prayers for the departed stoode I ansvvered him then presently as I coulde and shortly after as his further request vvas in vvrityng sumvvhat more at la●ge The vvhich my doing thoughe it vvas both rude and shor● yet he so measured it ethe● b● loue as it commonly happet● or elles by a singulare facility vvherby he mislykethe nothing that is meante vvell that he made it common to many moe then I vvoulde my selfe For thoughe I vvas vvell contented that the simple people or any other should take profite or pleasure by my paine yet cōsidering the matter to be ful of difficulty and to reache to Goddes iudgements in the vvorlde to coom I called to my minde the saing of Nebridius vvho as S. Augustine reporteth of him August epist 23. vvithe vvhome he vvas very familiare being muche studious and in●●is●tiue of the secret pointes of our faith vvoulde be excedingly offended to heare a man aske of a matter of importaunce a briefe declaration his saying vvas that he loued not a shorte ansvver to a longe quaestion VVherby I ●as me ●hought in a maner admonished that my treatise though it satisfied my frend and displeaced not other yet coulde not vvriten bothe hastely and briefely serue so longe and large a matter I did feare vvith all t● entre in this my lacke of yeres iudgement and knouledge in to the searche of suche secretes a● I knevve by that light vevve tha● I made of the matter before th● orderly proceding in the ca●s● vvoulde driue me vnto I did 〈◊〉 arne of auncient Irenaeus tha● suche doctrine and mysteries may be safely had and vvithe ovvte all feare of erroure taught by holy Priestes and Bisshoppes Qui cum episcopatus successione Libr. 3. Cap. 43. ch●risma veritatis certum secundum p●citum patris acceperunt VVho haue receiued vvith theire ordinary succession in theire pastoral sc●● the gracious gifte of vnderstanding the truethe And these are they saith he in the same place which may with owte all daunger to theime selues and theire hearers expound vnto vs the holy scriptures Other men doubtlesse vvhich this miserable age of oures seeth not that measureth all thinges by a fonde flourishe of learning vvhereof yett there vvas neuer lesse store can not nor must not be so bovvld thoughe their giftes vvere many moe and study much longer then mine And to confesse the truethe in deede 1 vvas sum vvhat lothe suche vvas my foolishe feare then to faule in hande vvith that matter vvhiche being vvell and to ●he bottom ripped I perceiued of al other causies in the vvorld most to touche the very sore of haeresye and therfore might to me procure the hatered of suche vvhose loue othervvise I coulde be cōtent ether to kepe or vvinne Besides that I savve the contention of the contrary parte seeking to make som ansvver to such thinges as might in this cause most greeue theire mindes or marre their matter should driue me from that course of studye vvhich other vvise in quietnesse I vvould most gladly kepe to serue trueth and defende my cause vvhich once of fredō and good vvil takē in hād must aftervvard of duety and necessity be vpholdē Not vvithstāding al these thīges good reader vvhich might most iustly hould me backe yet novv my frēdes request the case and cōditiō of this praesent time and my duety tovvardes my mother the Ch●●che may of good reason and must of necessity chaunge my former intent and remoue my priuate study to the benefite of the cōmō cause Therefore being at lenghth by iuste occasiō vvholy minded to serue as vvell as I coulde that vvay I thought good these late mounthes to make a more full declaration of that thing vvhiche at my sayde frendes request I had so briefely touched before That as then vvhen he first had it of me it onely serued him for his ovvne contentation the pleasuring of his singulare and secrete frendes and the helpe of som simple vvhome he knevve deceiued by ouer light looking on so graue matters so novv Good Christian reader I trust it may helpe in commō not onely such as haue bene caryed a vvay by the gile of haeresye but other that are muche subiecte to the daungerous flatterly of this praesent time vvith vvhome pleasure euer ioyned to the protestātes doctrine often more praeuayleth then the preachers persuasion Be bovvlde to charge any of oure aduersaries make he neuer so greate accompte of him self vvith the force of trueth here expressely proued both by argument and authority if it hovvld him not he shall I am sure brast ovvte vvith impudency and nott louse him sellfe by reason iuste dealing or honesty And if it be prooued to touche vvith safety the poysen it self let no man doubte to vse it for a preseruatiue in this commō infectiō of our time and country For it vvere no reason any man should practise vvithe the poore people priuyly in such thinges as he vvere not hable to maynteyn before their pilloures and preachers openly And for that hatered vvhiche I may procure to my selfe by myne ovvne trauell it shall not muche moue me for I shall ether be partaker therof as a common prayse in these euill dayes to most good men or elles if I be not vvorthy so muche I vvill learne to beare it as sum parte of punishment and satisfaction for my sinnes I may not bye frendship vvithe flattery nor mannes loue vvith forsaking Goddes truethe Of suche thinges then I vvill not make muche reckeninge but my principal care is that in vvriting or vvading in so deepe matters I kepe
owte 〈◊〉 Sathans bondage and conuerted to th●●elowship of Christes Church and let vs 〈◊〉 thing doubt but that which oure owne ●postles bothe by worde and worke by m●●acle and by martyrdom first proued vnto ●s is the very true and vnfallible faithe o● oure Christianitie For if that were not ●ue which at oure first conue●sion was preached vnto vs then we ●eceiued nott the faithe but faulshoode a● theire handes thē the histories doo rake a lowdelye in testifiing we were t●●ned to the Christiane faith bothe at that time and by such men then it wer no conuersion frō heathē Idolatrie to the woorship of Christ but it were a chaunge from one superstition to an other and this latter so much worse then the other bicause vnder the name of Christe there were practise perpetual of execrable sacrilege in instituting of a sacrifice to the defasing of our redemption in adoring bare breade as the hoste of our saluation in offering it vppe to God for the sinnes bothe of the quick and dead in practise of vnproffitable praiers for the soules deceased with the like faulse worship of God in all pointes Then theire preaching was highly to Goddes dishonoure pernicious to the people and damnalbe to theime selues Then haue all that euer ranne the rase of that faithe and doctrine till this daie whiche they taught perished withe theime then are they fownd false witnesseis whom we haue accompted as oure vndoubted true and lawfull pastors then God hath purposely deceiued vs with fained miracles full many with numbers off vaine visions then al our labour is lost till this day The holynesse of so many good princies and priestes is praised in vaine the bloude of Martyres shed in vaine the exercise of al sacramēts in vaine and bicause all deuotion consisted in our fathers dayes in the earnest zele of so faulse a religiō as they thinke this to be then the more deuotion the farther from Christ the lesse religion more nere to saluation then happy was he that was the worst and cursed was he that was counted the best then is oure case most carefull then are we worse thē all other natiōs that neuer receiued the name of Christ then are we worse thē we were befor our conuersion then to be shorte thereis no religion no Christ no God no hope of saluation All which thinges if they repugne to common sense and reason and to the comfortable hope of oure saluation which we haue receiued from god by Christe Iesus and the assured testimony of the spirite of God that we be a parte of his chosen Churche and sanctified in his holy name by the worde of truethe and lyfe which we by the ordinary ministery of man haue receiued signes and woonders cōfirming theire calling and doctrine then this religion which they planted first in our contrie must needes be in al pointes bothe holy true and acceptable vnto God Then as by that religion our fathers were ingraffed first in to Christes body misticall which is the Churche in which till this day they haue kepte the highe way to saluation so who so euer forsaketh this or any principall article or braunche therof and so leauethe that Churche into which we first entered at oure conuersion Note and take heed betime he leaueth assuredly lyfe and saluation and withe out all doubt euerlastingly perisheth Amōgest which pointes of doctrine oure aduersaries can not denie but the saing masse and offering for the deade the allmose and praiers for the departed was taught withe the firste and proued by miracles withe the rest The which ether to denie were ouer muche discredit of the antiquitye and plaine impudencie or elles to attribute theyme to the diuells woorking were oppen vntollerable blasphemie Yea this doctrine hathe brought the Churche to this bewtifull ordre in all degries as we haue seene All the noble monuments not onely in oure commōwelthe but through Christes churche do beare sufficient testimonie of oure first faithe herin This doctrine as the whole worlde knoweth foūded all Bisshoprikes buylded al Churchies raysed al Oratories Yf praing for the deade vvere takē avvay there shoulde no steppe of religigion remaine instituted al Collegies indued all Schooles maintened all hospitalles set forwarde al woorkes of charirye and religiō of what sorte so euer they bee Take a way the praiers and practise for the deade ether al these monumēts must fall or elles they must stād agaynste the first founders will and meaninge Looke in the statutes of all noble foundacions and of all charitable woorkes euer sithe the first daie of oure happy calling to Christes faithe whether they doo not expressely testifie that theire worke of almose and deuotion was for this one especiall respect to be prayde and songe for as they call it after theire deathes Looke whether your Vniuersites protest not this faithe by many a solemne othe bothe priuatly and openlye Looke whether all preachers that euer tooke degrie in the Vniuersity before these yeres are not bounde by the holy euangelistes to pray for certaine noble princies and praelates of this realme All oure superintendents are deeply and daily periured in euery of their sermons at Paules or other placies of name And so often as these preachers doo omit it so often are they periured so often as they ether eate or drinke of theire benefactors cost so often beare they testimony of they re owne damnation Answer me but one question I aske yowe Whether the firste authors of suche benefites as yowe enioye in the Churche at this day A harde question proposed to the Protestāt ether of bisshopricke or colledge or any other spirituall liuelyhoodde say yowre mindes vnfeinedly whether they euer mēt that suche men of suche a religion of suche lyfe of suche doctrine should enioye that allmose which they especially ordeined for other men and for contrary purpose say truethe and shame the deuill thoughte they euer to make roume in Collegies for your wiues mēt they euer to mainteine preachinge against the masse against praiers for theire owne soules when they purposely vpon that grounde began so godlye a woorke if they in deede neuer ment it as I knowe theye did not and as your oune consciencies beare witnesse with theim and against your selues that they did not howe cā yowe thē for feare of goddes highe displeasure against theire owne willes vsurpe those commodities whiche they neuer ment to suche as yow be A lasse good men thei thought to make frendes of wicked mammon and full dearly with bothe landes and gooddes haue they procured enimies to theire owne soules But if there be any sense in those good fathers and foūders as there is and if they be in heauen as they re good deseruing I trust hathe broght theime then surely they accuse yow most iustly of wicked vniustice before the face of God for deluding the people for breaking theire willes for vsurping theire commodities against theire professed mindes and meaninges Or if they be
carefull admonitions of all these blessed fathers they shall perceiue that euery time that Christes holy bloude is represented vnto God in the Masse for the departed they feele a present benefite and release of theire paines Quaest 34. ad Antioch they doo reioyse saithe holy Athanasius when the vnbloudy host is offered for theim The owlde fathers to put a difference betwixt the sacrificing of Christes own body vpon the crosse and the same vppon the altare in the Churche doo lightly terme this way of offering the vnbloudy sacrifice and the thinge offered which is Christes oune blessed body they call lykewise the host vnbloudie And Chrisostō neuer putting any doubt of the firste authors of offering for the deade prouethe that it is exceding beneficiall to the deceased bicause the apostles full of goddes spirite and wisdom woulde elles neuer withe suche care haue commaunded this holy action to be doone for theime Alasse a lasse for oure deare frendes departed that they must lacke this comforte But wo euerlasting to theyme that are the cause of so muche misery But heare I pray yowe what notable wordes S. Damascen hathe for the vtility and institution of these thinges Ibidem The holy Apostles and disciples saith he of oure sauiour Christe haue decried that in the dread soueraigne vndefiled and lyuely Sacraments so he cauleth the Masse there shoulde be kept a memoriall of those that haue taken theire slepe in faithe the which ordinaunce vntyll this day withowt gainsayng or controwlyng the Apostolike and Catholike Churche of God from one cost of the wyde worlde to another hathe obserued and shall religiously kepe til the worlde haue an end For doubtlesse these thinges that the Christiā religiō which is with owt error and free frō faulshod hath so many agies and worldes continued vnuiolably not with oute vrgent cause those thinges I say are not vaine but profitable to man acceptable to God and very necessarye for our saluation Thus farre spake the doctor settyng furthe not onely his owne mynd but the faithe of a numbre of the peeres of goddes Churche wherin to proue this doctrine to be catholike he fitly followeth the same way which Vincentius Lyrinensis gaue vs once for a ruele to trye truethe by The rule of trueth Prouing that it hathe antiquitie as a thing that came and hathe continued euen from the beginnyng of the Christian religion declaring that it hathe the consent of all natiōs bicause it is and hath bene practised throughe owt al the costes and corners of the wyde world and last that it hath the approbatiō of the wiseist and holiest mē that euer were in the Church of Christ And more thē all this that it shal so cōtinue till thend though it be for a time in sum peculiare natiōs omitted bicause it is receiued into a parte of that woorship of God which in the Church cā not perishe And this praescription of trueth our aduersaries can not auoyde but with suche vnseemely dealing as I trust they theim selues now be ashamed of as all other reasonable men are For now let theim coom with brasen facies and blasphemous tonges and say that praiers for the deade be vnprofitable that the rites of the burial be superstitious that to say the masse and sacrifice to be propitiatory for the soules departed is iniurious to Christes death that the doctors praised the errours of the ignorāt people of their daies that they all erred and were deceiued that the church of Christe hathe bene ledde in darke ignorance till these oure daies let theime bestowe these vayne presumptious wordes where they may take place for nowe all wise men doo perceiue that all these haue theire holy institution by Christe and his Apostles practised vniuersally in the primitiue Churche embrased of all godly people and approued to be wholy consonant to goddes worde by the pillors of Christes churche who so cōsonantly agree together in this point as well for the practise and proufe as for the beginning therof that to dissent from theime and trust in these reedes of oure daies were mere madnesse that are pufte to and fro with euery blast of doctrine that care not what they say so that they say not as other theire forefathers sayed that had rather then they woulde geue ouer a singulare opinion of theire owne imagination refuse and denie the authoritye of so many notable wise auncient godly and well learned fathers whome we haue named Although we haue left owt many of no woorse iudgement planely auouching these thinges to coom in to Christes Churche and woorship by the ordinaunce of his holy Apostles All which thinges if oure aduersaries haue redde then they are in a most miserable and heuy taking that doo withstand an open knowne truthe Heretikes doo agaynst theire ovvne cōsciences and as I feare against theire owne consciencies too Or if they haue not redde these plaine assertions of all lerned men sithe Christes tyme then they are most impudēt that so vainely bragge in a matter whereof they are not skilful But I trust God wil opē their eyes and breake theire prowde hartes to the obedience of his holy Churche Yf the authors be past hope yet their folowers shall take goodly occasion to forsake suche wicked maisters and be ashamed of all theire vndecent dealyng if they note and consider with me that the firste preachers of this peruerse opinion were suche that none of all theire scholares durst euer for shame for the profe of theire assertion name theire owne doctors Note And truely a man might well meruel why haeretikes hauing sum that did plainely professe theire opinions had yet rather picke owte sum darke sentence of any one of oure holy fathers whome they knowe to be directly against theime then oute of those same doctors of their own which in expresse wordes make for theime Yow shall not lightly heare an haeretike that deniethe prayng to sanctes or houldeth with open breache of holy vowes alleage Iouinianus or Vigilātius Nor a Sacramentarie seeke for the autoritye of Berengarius or Wicleffe thoughe they be of sum antiquitie and with out colour plainely doo mainteyne the doctrine that so well lyketh theime But they will trauell to writhe with plaine iniurie to the author Note the gile of an heretike sum sentence owt of Augustine or Ambrose or sum other that by theire whole lyfe and practise open theime selues to the worlde to beleue the cōtrary and al this by sum shewe of wordes for the bearing of their faulse assertions Marke it well I saye in heretikes that they can not for shame of theime selues Note euer name any of the plaine auouchers of theire owne opininions The cause is that the onely vpholding of their opinions made theime infamous to the whole posterity And if any honoure grewe vnto theime emongest the simple bicause they lacked not the waies to procure the peoples consent with admiration of theire eloquence or other plausible and populare
inuincible Irenaeus vseth it against the haeresyes of his tyme as a demonstration of muche force What saith he before Valentinus there was none of that his faulse secte Li. 3. Ca. 4 and he came in with his seede after the first preaching of oure faithe a good while I can tell when he began howe he increased howe long he continued Both he and that other Cerdon entered first vnder the gouernement of Hyginius The trial of false preachers grewe vpwarde vnder Pius and continued tyll Anicetus tyme and so making the lyke accompte of other archeheretikes at lenght thus he concludeth all these rose vppe in theire apostacie longe after that the Church was ordered in faith and doctrine In this sense spake Irenaeus But the ruele is common and certaine as any can be in the worlde and I woulde stand vpon the grounde therof against all faulse doctrine in the worlde A general rule to knovve haeresi by and thus it is Any opinion that may be truely fathered vpon any priuate man that was longe after the trueth was first preached by the apostles if it be vpon a point of our faithe and contentiously mainteyned it is an haeresye And thus againe who so euer was withstand in his first arising and preaching by suche as were in the vnitye of the Churche he was a faulse teacher and his abettours be heretikes And the force of this conclusion is so greate that the heretikes theime selues if they can get any likly shew of raysing of any doctrine or practise of goddes Churche in these latter daies they thinke they haue a good argument against the Catholikes Therefore they would father transubstantiation vpō this Councel the adoratiō of the Sacrament vpon that Pope indulgencies vpon that bisshop c. For they be as saulcie with goddes Church Councells and chefe gouernors as we be with the Iacke strawes of Geneua And yet when they haue traueled to theire heartes ake they can find no one thing first inuented by any of theim whome they faulsely name to be the authors therof But well seeing it is so stronge an argument of haeresye to haue the ofspring of a later author with plane prouisò of goddes Churche for his markinge let vs adde so muche strēgthe to oure cause to haue the father of the cōtrary faulshodde knowen and noted of thantiquity by his name Cap. 75. Lib. 3. In Anacephal Epiphanius that notable man in his book that he wrote for the confutatiō of all the haeresies that were before his time and in other of his woorkes too nameth an obscure felowe one Aërius to be the first author of this haeresie that prayers and sacrifice profitethe not the departed in Christe But what maner a felowe he was and howe lickly to be the foūder of such a schoole thow shalte perceiue best by the writers wordes VVhen Aërius coulde not obteyne the bisshoprick of Eustathius deposed after that he was once perfectly well skilled in Arius doctrine he inuented newe sectes of his owne affirming that there shoulde be no offering for the departed and of him lo the scholares were called Aërians Lett not the simple whome I woulde helpe in this cause be deceiued by the lyknes of these two names Arius and Aërius Arius Aërius for this later was the author of their secte and was a folower of the first called Arius in his doctrine beside And of the same sect and sectmaster S. Augustine thus saithe folowinge Epiphanius The Aérians were so named by one Aérius In li. de haeres ad Quod vult who taking snoffe that he could not get a bisshoprike fell in to the haeresy of Arius first and then added therevnto other haeresies of his owne makinge saing that we should not offer sacrifice for the dead nor obserue the solempne apointed fastes of the Church but that euery mā should absteane when he liste And there bothe he and Epiphanius do recken moe of his holy opinions which I omitte For it is enoughe for oure purpose and to confownde all the haeretikes of oure dayes that this opinion was noted as it spronge vp in the primitiue Church for heresie One that hathe for saken the Churche is indifferent to vvhat haeresy yovv vvill and the authors not onely condemned as heretikes in that point but in many other thinges beside For I neuer readde of nor yet knew any heretike but if he once mistrusted the catholike Church the Deuil was hable to perswade withe him as well in a numbre of matters as in one And that is the cause that any man seduced And therfore they call theire doinges Proceding falleth from one faulshood to an other till he wholy be drowned in the waues of tēpesteous doctrine And when he commeth once at the bottom then God knoweth he settith light by the matter contemneth it and is often past recouery Prouer. 18. as it is sayde Peccator cum in profundum venerit contemnit Euen so did this Aërius first throughe ambitious pride faule to the Arians secte but bicause he counted it nothing glorious to be a scholare he would be a master and that of a misheuous matter and a matter repugnant to the sense of all Christes churche which before his preaching generally as after receiued and faithfully vsed prayers and oblation for the dead Of which consent of the vniuersall worlde and the heretikes folye in withstanding the same the sayde Epiphanius saith thus Vbi sup 13 I will report his wordes in latine bicause they sownde very well thoughe him selfe wrote not in that language Assumpsit ecclesia in toto mundo assensus est factus antequàm esset Aerius qui ab ipso appellantur Aeriani quis autem magis de his nouit hic neseductus homo qui etiam superest nunc an qui ante nos testes fuerunt cae Thus in English The Churche hath receiued this trueth through the wide worlde it was sattled in all mens mindes before Aërius was borne or any of his sect that be nowe called Aërians And who I pray yowe is most like to knowe the truethe of these thinges this faulse wretche yet liuing at this daye or elles the faithfull witnessies that were before oure time Behoulde here your woorshipfull master yowe may suerly take greate cause of conforte in his lyuely worde mary sir he might haue bene an Archebisshop in our daies for he loued nether fasting nor praying He was fayne to be an haeretike for anger bicause he coulde not be made a bisshoppe then who now if he were in this happy age when the light is more plentifully powred vpon the people mighte haue bene promoted at Caluins decease to the ouerlooking of Geneua But his opinion was so notorious fallse that it grewe to no greate heade at that time or elles it was not so much regarded bicause it was ioyned to that horrible faulshod of Arrius against the blessed Godhood of Christe Iesus oure sauioure Note vvel Euery
shal be well vnderstande to be with owte difference practised for the liue and deade together That therby we may by good reason conclude seeing sacrifice was then offered for purgation of euery light offense that it was doone for all states of persons that were ether in this lyfe or after theire death to be perfectelie clensed from the same Although the facte of Iudas Machabeus be a playne proufe that there was a common knowne ordre of sacrifice for elles howe coulde he haue conceyued any such sacrifice neuer hearde of before howe could he lymite the valewe of procurement thereof by a certaine summe for euery soule deceased howe coulde he gather in pretence of a thinge neuer vsed before the peoples almose withe owte theire murmoure or motion therein Why would he haue sent mony to Hierusalem to procure that whiche had no example in the lawe or vse in the church was he so ignorāt that he knewe not theire ordre herein or so vnwise to haue sent his monie for nothing S. Augustine Answering an haeretike Lib. 2. de Orig. Animae Cap. 11. that by thauthoritye of the facte of Iudas woulde haue prooued that by sacrifice men might be saued thoughe they died vnbaptized or in deadly sinne saithe vnto him that he is not hable to prooue that Iudas or any other in the lawe offered for his frend or any man elles being vncircuncised no more then the Church nowe practisethe for any man not baptised Wherby he plainely confessethe that the lawe had a sacrifice for the deade which beyng vrged by that heretike he might haue denied withe good helpe of his cause and answer to the aduersary but that the contrary case was so cleare not onely by that booke which he tooke for Canonicall scripture as before is proued but also by the fulle consent of all the Churche of God which bothe by plaine practise and most graue ordinaunce had from Christes time set forthe and approued the vndoubted truethe therof The conclusion of the vnhole booke vvith an admonition to the reader But here will I nowe make an ende desiring thee gentle reader with suche indifferency to weighe the dooing and dealing of bothe parties as the importaunce of the cause the loue of trueth the necessary care of thyn owē saluation and thy duety towardes God and his Churche requireth There is none of al those pointes which the vnfaithful cōtention of our miserable age hath made doubtefull in which thow maiste better beholde howe vprighte the waies of truethe and vertue be and howe pernicious double and deceitfull the dealing of haeresy is The one is vpholden by the euidēt testimony of holy scripture the other mainteyneth her trayne by bowlde deniall of scriptures the one seketh with humility the mening at their mouthes whom God hathe vndoubtedly blessed with the gifte of vnderstanding and interpretatiō the other by singulare pride fowndethe her vnfaithfulnesse vpon the phantasies of lighte and lewde persons that are pufte too and fro with euery blaste of doctrine The one resteth vpon the practise of al nations the vsage of all agies and the holy woorkes both of God and mā thother holdethe wholy by contempte of oure elders flatery of the present daies and vphappy waaste of all woorkes of vertue religion and deuotion th one foloweth the gouernours and appointed pastours of oure soules whose names be blessed in heauen and earthe thother ioyneth to suche as for other horrible haeresies and wicked lyfe are condemned bothe a lyue and deade of the vertuous and can not for shame be named of theire owne scholars The one hath the warraunt of Goddes who le Church the other standeth on curse and excommunication by the grauest authority that euer was vnder God in earthe To be shorte trueth is the Churchis dearlinge haeresy must haue her mainteinaūce abrode This one holy Catholike and Apostolike Churche is it wherunto we owe all duety and obedience both by Goddes commaundement and by the bonde of oure first faith and profession There is no force of argument no probability of reason no subtelty of wit no depe compase of worldely wisdom no eloquence of man nor Angell nor any other motion that can be wrought in the world that shoulde make a man doubte of any article approued by her authority And if thow yet feare to geue ouer thy whole sense and thyne owne sellfe to so carefull a moother in whom thow wast begotten in thy better birthe compare oure Churche with theires compare her authority and theres her maiesty and theires Oures is that Church that hath borne downe hethen Princies that hathe destroyed Idolatrie that hath cōuerted all nations to Christes faith that hath waded in bloude that hath liued in welth that hath bene assalted by hel by euil lyfe by haeresy and yet she stādeth Take a way all this compare her constancy in doctrine with theire inconstant mutability compare the noble army of Martyrs the holy company of Cōfessours the glorious trayne of so many blessed wise and learned Doctoures of many thowsand saintes that euer accompany her maiesty compare I say all these with the raskall soul diars of the contrary campe Vbicunqu● fuerit corpus Mat. 24. illic cōgregabuntur aquila I warraunt the gentle reader feare nothing for wher so euer so honorable a personage is there is the kingly company of egles Beholde her grace of miracles her workes and her wonders her authority in discipline her wisdom in gouerment her acquability in al estates and I am sure thow shallt confesse Quod dominus est in loco isto Gene. 28. ego nesciebā Our Lord suerly is in this place and I was not aware therof For Christes loue if thowe hast folowed or yet haue any phantasy to the seuered company grope with owte flatery of thy sellfe the depthe of thyne owne conscience feele whether God hath not suffered the to faule for som sin Coom into this Church and at the same time thowe shalt be healed to thy aeternal reioysing Touche once the hemme of Christes garment adore his foutstoole cleaue vnto the alltare and if thowe ●nde not comfort of conscience ease ●f harte and light of trueth neuer cre●et me more Proue once what is In ●orto concluso fonte signato in the gar●en enclosed and the wellspring so su●ely sealed vp Cantic 4. Ioyne withe the sanctes ●n heauē with the soules in Purgatory with the fathers of thy faithe in earthe with al holy mē both alyue and deade And thow shalt thinke thy self all ready in heauen to match with that happy and blessed felowship owte of whiche there is nether light lyfe nor any hope of saluation Merueile not that the maisters of dissension will not returne whome throughe pride of harte disobedience to Goddes Church and willfull withstanding the knowne trueth by the heuy hande of Goddes vnsercheable iudgement we see to be stricken withe blindnesse of minde and exceding darkenesse of vnderstandinge Learne to feare God betyme
theire lyefe were sinners and sum wicked men too who yet being in Christes Churche and vsing the benefite of the blessed sacraments had they re sinnes so forgeuen that not purging theire wicked lyefe by sufficient poenaunce in theire dayes they must of necessety entre into the torment of transitory fyere there to be poonishid not in rage and rigoure with out pity but in anger of fatherly correction ioyned with clemency and much mercye Origen is alleaged for oure cause vpon vvhose erroure in a matter sumvvhat apperteyning to oure purpose S. Augustines iudgemēt is more largely soght and ther vvith it is declared by testimony of diuerse holy authors vvhat sinnes be chefely purged in that temporall fyre Cap. 8. THese three noble learned men might right wel satisfie oure search for the sense of the textes bothe off the Prophet and Apostle and persuade any reasonable man in the whole cause yet for that there be som that meane not to relent in their lewde opinions for light proffers I will store theime with testimonyes Origenes one of greate antiquity in many places of his woorkes vnderstandeth bothe the saide textes of Malachie and S. Paule in the like sorte by whome we may well take a greate taste of the tyme and churche where he liued what men of wisdom and vertue then iudged off thinges whiche nowe of fooles be contemned and of haeretikes condemned also But namely vpon the prophet Ieremy in these wordes Homil. 12. Si post fundamentum Iesu Christi non solum in tuo corde aurum argentum lapidem praeciosum superaedificaueris verum ligna foenum stipulam quid tibi vis fieri cum anima seiuncta fuerit a corpore vtrum ne ingredi vis in sancta cum lignis tuis foeno stipula vt polluas regnum dei an propter lignum foenum stipulam foris residere vis pro auro argento lapide precioso nil mercedis accipere sed neque hoe aequum est Quid ergo sequitur nisi vt primū propter lignum ignistibi detur qui consumat foenum lignum stipulam c. Yf vpon the foundation which is Christe Iesus thou do not onely buylde goulde siluer and preciouse stone but allso woodde hay and strawe what doost thou looke for after thy death willt thow entre into the holy places with thy wodde hay and stoble and defile the kingdom off God or elles for thy woodde hay and straw thow wilte abyde furthe and so lyese the rewarde of thy goulde siluer and preciouse stone But that were no reason then there is no way but one first to receyue fier for to consume and burne owte thy wood hay and stooble and then afterward to receyue for thy better workes the rewarde of saluation ▪ so saith Origen Whose iudgement iff any man mistrust in this poynt bicause he erred in other let him learne to miscredet onely his or other mennes singulare opinions and priuate phantasyes wherin they disagreed from the residew of the common body of Christ his Churche and not contemne in any man the confirmation of the vniuersal sense Basil Cap. penult de spiritu sancto whiche he findeth in the vniforme doctrine of all other Christian Catholikes In deede it was so euident that this Purgatory fyre of whiche the Apostle speaketh shoulde be in the other lyefe that this learned man afterward leauing the meaning whiche the holy Church had opened for the prouf off certeyne transitory poonishment in the next worlde for meaner offenders woulde of his owne heade go forwarde whiche is the bane of many a goodly witt and mainteyne that all greuous crimes Vincent lyr and most wicked maners might be purged by this fyre after death and the partyes in tyme saued De fide operibus Cap. 16. so that they had faithe for theire foundation ▪ wherby as S. Augustine noteth of him he made onely faith to saue the wicked withowte repentaunce or good workes Ageinst whiche perniciouse errour the saide doctour often writeth and proueth that this place of S. Paule can not make for the delyuery of the wicked or greuous offenders in any case And being sumwhat vrged by the aduersaryes arguments or elles bicause he woulde take all howlde from theyme whiche they seemed to haue by that scripture he seeketh theime owte another meaning not contrary at all to the trueth of Purgatory but yet farther off theire purpose Declaring that this fyer might as he saith there signify summe grefe off this worlde for the abatyng of summe inordinate affections that be founde in many euen towardes thinges otherwise lawfull Thoughe he was very lothe to auouche this as the vndouted meaning of that scripture being pleaced with any other wherby they shoulde not be forced to deny the aeternall damnation of impaenitent sinners as in deede he neuer gaue this meaning but where the Origenistes did vrge him and in such places only where he answereth to Origens argumentes ▪ for in other places where he was free from contention with the saide sectes he euer in expresse termes grounded the doctrine of Purgatory vpon the Apostles wordes Yea euen in the same answere to the aduersary he was so mindful of Goddes iustice in the world to coom and ferd lest he might geue any occasion of the contrary errour to deny purgatory that in the same talke with the Origenistes he confesseth there might wel be summe greffe in the nexte lyefe allso which might likewise purge and delyuer a man from the loue of transitory thinges wherwithe the best sorte of men be in this our misery often very sore loden Allthoughe in dede he doubted whether any suche affection and loue of thinges deare vnto vs in this worlde as of wiefe kinred acquaintance Euch C●p. 67. 68. or suche lyke might remaine in man after his departure hense and so there in time to be lessened and in fine vtterly remoued or worne away by som greefe and sorow which in the nexte lyefe might by the lacke of the said things vexe and molest his minde As we see it commūly faule in this present liefe where man by diuerse proffitable troobles of this worlde lerneth to set light by thinges which in ordre he might well loue being for all that more merite to forsake theyme Euch Cap. 69. And of this pointe S. Augustine hathe these wordes in one place Tale aliquid fieri etiam post banc vitam incredibile non est vtrum ita sit quaeri potest sum such thing may well be after this lyefe and therof quaestion may be made This clerkly argument our englishe apologie vrgeth By whiche wordes the haeretikes of oure tyme ether of ignorance or of malice whiche be euer yoked to gether in suche men haue borne the simple in hand that this holy doctour doubted of Purgatory A little houlde wil serue such wringers because he doubted of it they beleue as they thinke by good authority that
let theime shewe wherupon theire own credets be growne so greate that withe owt reason liklyhod or authority men must neades beleue theime It is a straunge case that what so euer they auouche it must be Goddes worde what meaning so euer they make for mainteinaunce of their wicked foly it must be termed the true sense of scripture And the trueth it selfe shewing al force in the conference off diuers places off holy writte in weght of reason in the workes and wrytyngs of al antiquitye shall be so lightly regarded I woulde to God the people pitifully deceiued by suche vaine flying taulke coulde behoulde the vpright wayes of trueth The difference betvvixte the Catholikes dealing and the aduersaryes or coulde learne by the plaine dealing of oure side to require som grownded proufe of these new doctoures deuiseis They may well perceyue if they haue any necessary care of those weghty matters touching our saluation so nere that the Catholike neuer aduētureth to bring any scripture for his purpose but he wil be suer for his warraunt to haue the same so expownded by the auncient fathers of oure faithe lest by his rashnesse he deceyue other and father som faulshod vpon the holy writers of Goddes will whiche were horrible sacrilege But on the other side if a man might pose maister Caluin or Flaccius or suche other of that light family what doctour or scripture they folowed in the exposition of S. Iames his place Iacob 5. for the anointing with holy oyle when they were not ashamed to geue this sense of that scripture that it weare good to call the elders off the people that had som salue or ointement medicinable to ease the sike mannes sore what woulde they say I am sure suche felowes will not excuse theimeselues by ignorance for the arrogācy of that sort had rather be counted ether malicious or praesumptuous then vnskillfull but of passing bowldenesse all suche must neades be noted that dare shape suche an exposition off Goddes blessed worde whiche they neuer hearde surmised of any wyse man before 1. ad Tim. 5. What doctour did they or Luther folowe when they expounded S. Paules wordes of widowes mariage after vowes made whiche the texte calleth breaking theire first faithe to be meant by the promesse of the Christian faithe made in Baptisme Was not this a galant glose in this sense she that breakes her faith of baptisme shall be damned for mariage Aske theime wher these prety scholes were first picked Pose master Iuell where he had that the churche of God might erre Yowe shall see theime ernestly vrged in these matters howe little they haue to say and yet how fast they will tennesse one to another in taulke But I will not make a reckoning of theire vnseemly glosies I woulde their folowers would onely but aske theime in all matters from whense they had suche newe meaninges whiche they falsely father on Goddes word that we might once hedge theime with in som compasse of reason as we be contented with al oure heartes to charge our own selues in euery matter that we handle as partely they may conceiue by oure discourse and shall more clearely anone An ansvver to certeyne obiections of the aduersaryes moued vpon the diuersity off meanings vvhich they see geuē in the fathers vvritynges of the scriptures before alleaged for Purgatory and that this doctrine of the churche standeth not ageinst the sufficiency of Christes Passion Cap. 11. Obiect BVt nowe the other side seeketh for som shiftes and drawethe backe in thys extremyty thus That the places of the owlde and newe testament nowe rather alleaged for my purpose and the proufe of purgatory thoughe they be thus expounded of the doctoures yet they may haue some other meaninge and sumtymes be construed otherwise by the fathers theime selues Ansvver To whiche I answer and freely confesse that they so may haue in deede but the aduersary must take this with all that the pillars of Christes Churche woulde neuer haue geuen this sense emongest other or rather before all other meaninges that probabelyty or cōference of scriptures did driue theime vnto hadde it conteyned a plaine faulshood as the haeretike supposeth it doothe Yea had not the doctrine of Purgatory bene a knowne trueth in all ageis it should neuer by the graue iudgement of so many wyse men haue atteyned any coloure of scripture For thoughe many meaninges be fownde of moste harde places in all the bible yet there is no sense geuen by any approued doctoure that in it sellfe is faulse And thinke yowe diuerse textes of the holy scripture coulde haue caryed a faulse persuation of Purgatory downe from the apostles dayes to oure tyme for true doctryne Marke well and yowe shal perceyue that the Church of Christe hathe euer geuen roome to the diuersitye of mennes wittes the diuision of graces and sondry geftes in expositiō of most places of the whole testament Diuersity of sensies be allovved so that none of theime conteine any fallshood in it selfe with this prouiso alwayes that no man of singularity should father any faulshodde or vntrueth vpon any texte but otherwise that euery man might abund in his meaning Mary faulshood she neuer suffered one momēt to take hould or bearing of any scripture vnrepraehended The diligent vvatche that the churche kepeth ouer the truth Ecclesia multa tolerat saith S. Augustine tamen quae sunt contra fidem vel bonam vitam non probat nec tacet nec facit the Churche beareth many thinges yet suche thinges as be hourtfull to faithe or good lyefe she neuer approuethe Epi. 110. nor dothe theime her selfe nor howldethe her peace when she seeth theime doone by others Therof we haue a goodly example in oure owne matter So longe as any conuenient meaning might be fownde owte by the holy writers of that place alleaged owte of S. Paule for suche as should be saued through fier she liked and alowed the same Som proued that the elect must be saued by lōg sufferāce som sayd the tribulatiō of this lyfe and world must trie mennes faith and workes som said the grefe of mind in losing that whiche they ouer muche loued was the burning fire of mannes affections som woulde haue the greuous vexation of departure owte of this lyefe to be a purgatory paines som construed the texte of the fyre of conflagration that shall pourge the workes of many in the latter day finially they all agreede that the temporall torment of the worlde to coom is litterally noted and especyally meant by the fire which the Apostle speaketh of All these so little doo disagree emongest theime selues that not onely by diuerse men but off one man they might well all be geuen And being al in theime selfe very true the holy Churche so likethe and alloweth theime eche one that yet by tho common iudgement of al learned men that meaning for Purgatory paines she approueth as the most agreeable
of his might turne from theime but if they doo bicause there is suche affinity betwixt both theire teachings and this of theires may seeme allwaies to haue bene ioyned to that extreme faulshod of the others then shall Goddes Churche stille protest the faithe of her children by praiers and practise for the deade bothe by the example of the fathers in Christes Churche vnder the gospel and by the facte of worthy Iudas in the lawe before But nowe their answer must be here that this booke by which I haue vrged theime so farre shal be no scripture And this is the isshue of haeresye lo. These mē that lightely writhe and wreaste Goddes worde Heretikes deny scriptures from all true meaning to the maintenaunce of theire matter being forther charged by euidence of the wordes when other conuenient shifte can not be founde they are driuen to refuse vtterly the sacred canonicall scripture of God for notwithstanding theire perpetuall bragges of scripture yet there can no scripture houlde theime but they will ether find a fonde shifte to lowse it or elles a shamefull stoutnes vtterly to brast and breake it They first seeke by suttelty to vnfasten the bonde of Goddes trueth which is euery waie so enwrapped with the testimonies of holy scripture thē as they can not woorke by wiles they bouldely brast the bandes in sonder Thus when for misconstruing of this plane assertion of the booke of Machabeis they can conuey no fit meaninge they are driuen to harde shiftes and vnseemely to deny the whole booke to be scripture and therfore in matters of quaestion of no authoritye In which pointe the authoritye of the Iewes mouethe theime more in denying the bookes to be in the canō of goddes scripture then the decree of the holy Church for the approuing of the same to be scripture But S. Hierom thoughe he confesse the Iewes not to allowe theime In prol mach Though against a Ievve or an heretike they coulde not proue any article of faithe nether then nor novve by them Ca. 48. yet is boulde to recken theyme emongest the bookes of the holy histories not measuring they re authority by the canon of the Haebrues but by the ruele of Christiane councells The Canons of the Apostles will chaleng theyme frō the Iewes and haeretikes to be scripture stille Innocentius the first in his rehersall of diuine bookes noombrethe these of the histories of the Machabees also the councell of Carthage the third authorisheth theime S. Augustine in his bookes Ca. 47. De doctrina Christiana Li. 2. Cap. numbring all canonicall scriptures with the reste reciteth these also Off which bookes in the xviij Cap. 36. of the Citie of God he thus forther testifiethe Ab hoc tempore apud Iudaeos restituto templo non reges sed principes fuerunt vsque ad Aristobulum quorum supputatio temporum non in scripturis sanctis quae Canonicae appellantur sed in alijs inuenitur in quibus sunt Machabaeorum libri quos non Iudaei sed Ecclesia pro Canonicis habet From this time he meanethe after the history of Esdras there was no kinges butt chiefe gouernours after the restitution and repaire of the temple till Aristo●ulus time of all which time there is no chronikle nor counte in the scriptures which be Canonicall but in other that be extant we finde that supplied as in the bookes of Machabeis which bookes allthoughe the Iewes doo not yet the Churche of God counteth for canonicall scripture But what shoulde we stande in this point the whole Churche of God and euery part or prouince therof euery lerned doctour and vertuouse Christen man hathe receiued and alowed theime for scripture ▪ the which constant and perpetuall iudgement of the Churche of Christe if any man refuse lett him be aestemed an Ethnike Or bicause he defendeth the Iewes authority ageinst the determination of Christes Churche lett him be at this time accompted for a Iewe. And yet I thinke he ouer shooteth theime herein for they confesse the historye to be trewe allthough not holy scripture nether haue they founde any suche erroure of doctrine therein conteined as he doth And as for the auncient Christian writers and famouse doctours they alleage euen that place to proue the lawfull praier for Christian soules departed whereby these felowes take occasion to saie it is no scripture at all As godly Damascenus in these woordes Scitis enim quid dicat scriptura quomodo Iudas ille Machabaeus in Syon Ciuitate regis magni vt cognouit populum sibi subiectum à Palestinis hostibus occisum scrutatione facta inuenta idola in sinibus eorum statim pro vnoquoque eorum ad dominum qui ad misericordiam facilis paratus est munera propitiatoria obtulit sane ob summam religionem fraternamque charitatem In lib. pro defunc in hoc facinore vt in omnibus alijs a diuinissima scriptura magnificus admirabilis habebatur Yowe knowe saithe he what the scripture reportethe how that worthy Iudas Machabaeus of Syon the City of the great kinge after he vnderstode certeine of his subiectes to haue bene slaine of the Palestines his enemies and searche being made had founde in thyire lappes idols streght waies offered to God who is muche inclined to mercy for euery of his souldiars so slaine propitiatory oblations ▪ who suerly for that acte as proceding off wonderfull religiō and brotherly loue and in all other affaires is of the holy writte aestemed mighty and meruelous Longe before this writer did sanct Augustine vse the same booke and text of Machabeis De eura pro mort agenda to proue the praiers and sacrifice for the departed in peace In the booke of Machabes saith he we reade that sacrifice was offered for the deade But yf it were in none of the oulde scriptures redde at all yet the authority of the vniuersall Churche which for this poynt is playne were af no smaule force whereby it is prouided that in the prayers which be made at the altare by the prest to our lord god the commemoration of the deade shall haue theire place Thus by these auncient authors bothe the bookes be approued the text it felfe for which oure aduersaries vnworthely denied the boke alleaged for the same purpose and the doctrine so sure that yf no scripture coulde be fowde it woulde beare out it self against all faulshod But this doctor handleth Pelagius the haeretique denyng the booke of wisdom to be scripture bicause there was a sentence oute of the fourthe chapter therof broght against his wicked doctrine euen as he shulde be and as these wranglers in the like case must be The place well marked shall serue our turne when so euer we heare theime so impudently reiecte scriptures bicause they impugne theire haeresies which elles shulde be as good scriptures as any booke of the Bible yf they ether would make with theime or by any crafty colouring not playnely make againste
that one Victor who had made Geminus Faustinus being a priest ageynst the ordre taken in the councell of Aphrik thexecutor of his testament shoulde therfore haue no prayers of the clergye nor facrifice after his departure sayde or doone for him For in that tyme of greate persecution suche instant prayers so often sacrifice the scarsity of ministers the peoples necessity required that the priestes shoulde perpetually with oute all exception of worldly affayers serue the altare But you shall heare this blessed Martyrs or rather his wordes together with the councelles ordinaunce Victor cum contra formam nuper in consilio a sacerdotibus datā Geminum Faustinum presbyterum ausus sit actorem constituere non est quò pro dormitione eius apud vos fiat oblatio aut depraecatio nomine eius in ecclesia frequentetur vt sacerdotū decretū religiose necessariò factū seruetur a nobis simul caeteris fratribus detur exemplum ne quis sacerdotes ministros dei altari eius ecclesiae vacantes ad seculares molestias deuocet In englishe thus Seeing victor ageinst the ordre taken of late in a holy synod of priestes hathe made Geminus Faustinus the chefe dooer in th execution of his will and testament lett it be prouided that there be no oblation ther wyth yowe for his rest nor yet any prayers in his behaulfe in the churche that the decrye of the priestes before sayde may be religiously obserued and executed by vs. That therby all other oure bretherne may beware by his example how they wythdrawe suche as should serue the author to entangle theim selues with worldely affayres And here nowe oure aduersaryes must be called vpon and asked howe they can a way with this geare The haeretikes called vpon to ansvver whether this light of truethe be not ouer vehement for they re bleared eyes owle light or mooneshyne I trowe or mirke midnight were more fit for they re darke workes and doctryne oure way is ouer muche trodden for theues All this course of oure cause The vvhole matter ordered to oure hands so agreethe with it selfe so standethe wythe reason so vphoulden by scripture so ordered in all poyntes that Momus him selfe coulde practise no arte nor picke no quarelles here For such we must pray for those we must not praye in this case the sacrifice of goddes churche relieueth the departed in that case it is comfortable onely to the liuynge sum men neede helpe aster their death others helpe we neede and not they oures for open infidelles and haeretikes praiers are not vsed for all secrette offendres bicause their case is not knowne to the church of charity towardes her childrē she opēly prayethe sum she poonishethe sum she pardonethe for al she merueilous tēderly carethe This doctrine of truethe is purposely ordered by our elders euery point is touched and tried to our handes What time of the day was it in goddes church say trueth and shame the deuill when holy Cyprian wrote these thinges when the councell of aphrick decried these thinges when victor was punished by lack of sacrifice and prayers at his departure doeth your time of ignorance which yowe haue lymited for your waulke reache vp so highe in goddes howse but I will spare yow to anone your answer is not redie VVhat that holy sacrifice is vvhiche vvas euer counted so beneficiall to the liue and deade The punishement of oure sinnes by the heuy losse thereof The greate hatered vvhich the diuell and all his side hath euer borne tovvardes Christes aeternall priesthood and the sacrifice of the Churche And that by the saide sacrifice of the Masse the soules departed are especially relieued Cap. 8. ANd now we must faule in hand with the good Christiā Catholike for the searche of this so oftē named sacrifice so cōfortable to the liue so profitable to the dead and what that oblatiō is which the holy catholike and apostolike Church hath euer vsed through oute the world for the sinnes of the departed in place of the offeringes of the lawe and that sacrifice which Iudas Machabaeus made and procured at Hierusalem for the offensies of his people that perished in battle Surely it is no other but the sacrifice of our mediatour as S. Augustine termeth it and the offering vppon the altare It is no other then that obltation which so fully and liuely expressethe the death and passion of Christ Iesus Who being once offered by the sheeding of his blessed bloude for the redemption of man kind hath wrought such a vertuous effect not onely in the holy sacraments for the giuing of grace and remission of sinnes but allso hath lefte in a merueilous mistery his owne holy and blessed body and bloode as wel to feede vpō for the especial strēght and comforth of our soules as to offer vppe the same for the remembrance of his death and cleāsing of our sinnes Not in that wise as it was doone vpon the crosse by the painefull sheeding of his bloude but as it was instituted first in the last supper Where Christ oure God and redemer according to the order of Melchisedech gaue to his apostles and offered to God the father that body which afterwarde was betraide and the same bloudde which was shed after also for the remission of sin beinge with all tearmed by him the bloude of the newe and aeternall testament as that which in the newe lawe shoulde succeade the bloddy offeringes of the owlde testament Whereof God allmighty being as a man woulld say lothesom or full hathe instituted this by his onely sonne as a most pure and praecious oblation and sacrifice to be continued in the Church through out the costes and corners of the rounde worlde Whiche being celebrated in the blessed memory of his sonnes passion and hauing no other hoste nor oblation then that whiche then was offered can be no other sacrifice then that whiche there was made for the forgiuenesse of sinne and redemption of the worlde The which woorthy action of Christes Churche so fructefully applieth vnto vs the benefite of oure maisters death that thereby we may haue comfortable hope of remission of all such misdeedes as most iustly deserued Goddes wrathe and terrible indignation ageinst vs. Now this is that blessed sacrifice which S. Augustin with feare and reuerence termeth in a thousand places of his works the sacrifice of the Altare the sacrifice of our Mediatour the sacrifice of oure price the sacrifice of the body and bloude of Christ the holsom and proffitable sacrifice the sacrifice of Melchisedech The common names of honoure geuen to the holy masse in olde time the new sacrifice S. Chrisostom the Reuerent sacrifice the hono●able Mysteries the Fearefull sacrifice Athanasius the propitiatory sacrifice the vnbloudy Hoste S. Cyprian the sacrifice of the Churche the perpetuall sacrifice the meate offering the medicine for our infirmities Iraeneus the pure sacrifice the new sacrifice of the new testament Clement ageine the vnbloudy sacrifice the rationable
the vnworthinesse of these our dooleful daies and bewailed his own misery as we shoulde doo oures Ita Policarp ex Iren. crying owt with an oulde blessed father O Deus bone in quae me seruasti tēpora vt ista blasphema sustineā O Lorde that I shoulde be reserued for these times to abide suche blasphemie victor de persecut vandal Victor reporteth in his history of the persecution of the vandalles that were Arians that the Gouernour of that cursed company of cruel haeretikes would not suffer the christian men whome he had slaine to be broght home withe seruice and sacrifice but then the good people woonderfully bewailed theire case seeing theim practise cruelty vpon theire soules allso in that they would not suffer theime to enioye at their departure and buriall the rites of goddes church Thus saithe that Author Quis vero sustineat atque possit sine lachrimis recordari dum praeciperet nostrorum corpora defunctorum sine solemnitatehimnorū cum silentio ad sepulchra perduci O Lord who coulde haue fownd in his heart to be houlde then or could yet once thinke of it withe owte teares how he gaue in charge that the bodies of our brethern departed should be broght to the graue and buried with owte all solemnity of himnes in silence and sorowe Ecclesi Cap. 7. It was euer giuen to wicked hard harted haeretiques to prohibere gratiam mortuis to be vnmercifull and to staie the fauoure of good men from the departed epist 8. li. 2. Nouatus as S. Cyprian chargeth him noluit patrem fame defunctū sepelire would not bury his owne father deade of honger bane But to let suche men passe withe the praesent bewayling of our vnhappy dayes let vs with more conforte behould the steppes of good men past how kindely and brotherlyke they haue principally procured the holy sacrifice for they re frendes and felowes gone before For seeing the onely prayers of good men haue bene proued so profitable and the repraesentation of som holy workes of almose hath often moued God to pity as we haue proued towards the release of the departed his payne what may we not hope to obteyne for oure britherne deceased when we shal ioyne in prayers withe the holy angelles with the blessed sanctes with Goddes holy ministers in the representation of Christes most blessed body and bloude before the face of his father when the whole churche of god in that honorable action prayethe and Christe him selfe is both the sacrifice and the priest both the asker and the geuer of pardon when the maiesty of God the blessed trinitye is passingly pleaced by the merites of Christes deathe so liuely set out in these honorable but vnspeakable mysteries what may we not here procure for the soule of the churchies childe what shal be denied to so humble askers in the praesence of goddes own son and begging mercy for his deathes sake And so doth S. Chrisostom assure the faithfull in these goulden wordes Non frustra ab apostolis sancitum est vt in celebratione vener andorū mysteriorum memoria fiat eorum qui hinc discesserunt Homil. 3. in epistolā ad philipp nouerunt quippe illis multum hinc emolumenti fieri multū vtilitatis stante siquidem vniuerso populo manus in coelos extendente coetu item sacerdotali verendoque proposito sacrificio quomodo deum non placaremus pro istis orantes Yt was not for noght that the apostles decried and ordeined that in the celebratiō of the honorable mysteries there should be an especiall memoriall of the departed for they right well knewe greate commodity and benefite to arise ther vpon For the whole multitude houlding vp theire handes towards heauen together with the company and quiere of priestes and the dreadfull sacrifice set furth before all men howe is it possible but we shoulde appeace goddes wrath praying for theim loke ye what this mannes iudgement was and see from whense he had it euē of the holy apostles I warraunt yowe and no worse nor latter fownders But of that pointe for the full deriuing of our christian vsage frō the first fathers of our faith more cōuenient place shal be geuen herafter Nowe I wil serue the cause and the readers desire first withe certaine peculiare examples of most learned and godly fathers worthy of all credet in the godly prouision for certeine of theire dearest frendes by sacrifice and praier both made by theim selues and procured by others That we may haue here not onely whom to beleeue teaching the truethe but whome to folowe practising the same with deuotion which they preached withe cōstancye before That the practise of any pointe in religion maketh the most open shevve of the fathers faith And that all holy men haue in plaine vvordes and most godly praiers vttered their beliefe in our matter Cap. 9. ANd I take the open practise of any point to be a more pithy protestation of a mānes faithe thē by words cā be made Therfore if a mā were doubtful ether of the trueth of any article or of the meaning of sum doctours wordes looke the same mannes practise and it shall put him owt of doubt thereof streght wayes as for an example seeme sum wordes of S. Augustin to make for the sacramentaries haeresie that Christe is in the honourable sacrament but by a figure or Theodoretus or any other auncient fathers declaratiō are their wordes doubtful to the reader leaue the wordes thē if thowe syncerely seeke for truethe with owte contention and seeke owte if thowe can sum practise of those same men and that Churche where they liued for the same point But what way of worke in this matter consisting in doctrine may assure vs of theire beliefe of whose wordes we doubted before Theodor. dial 2. August super psal 98. Dionis ecclesiast hierarch Cap. 3. Basil de spiritu sanct Cap. 27. Mary sir this looke howe they behaued theime selues in the receiuing of it in the ministering of it in the carefull keping of it whether they did adore it with godly honoure whether they solemnely shewed it to the people to be worshipped whether they praide by solemne and formall wordes vnto it whether they taughte theire children to caulle it God and Christe Lib. 3. de Trin. c.. 10 yea so farre that Augustine affirmeth that the children in his daies till they were after instructed thought that God appeared in the shappe of breade as all these yongers seeing the honour and reuerence of theire elders and theime selues nurtered to houlde vppe theire handes and knocke theire brestes must yet needes meruaile how these owtwarde formes came to so holy an vse further whether the Christiā people were not sclaundered for worshipping and doing sacrifice to Ceres and Bacchus Lib. 20. cōtra Faustū Cap. 13. when the wicked infidelles sawe theire behauiour towardes the holy Hoste whether it was not vsed in woorking of miracles in driuing away deuilles in daungerouse times of
the like is nowe before proued Call vpō theim and aske theim in earnest because it lieth vpon thy saluation whether thowe muste geue any credet to the perpetuall agreement and consent of all auncient doctors If they saye yea desire theime to answer first to all these placies so euidently confirming oure purpose that they can not abyde any clowde or couer of mannes sutteltye for theire shifting to any forged sense If they can not yet let theime alleage sum place of any auncient writer theime selues whiche doo expressely denye purgatory or praiers for the deade as we for they confirming thereof haue doone in plaine termes with owte crafte or colour many If they be not able to doo so much yet go further withe theime aske theyme whether they haue any expresse wordes in scripture that denie praiers to be proffitable for the dead not by a fonde gesse of theire own heades corrupt cōsciencies or praeiudicate mindes expoūded to that prupose but I say by expresse wordes or at least which is liberty enoughe expounded for that meaning by any one man of all the antiquitie If they can alleage thee but one worde of scripture construed of any one I say in all agies to confirme theire vnderstanding to be currant and not framed for theire phantasy to serue the necessity of theire cause be bould to folow theim I would not put theime to the paines to make discourse throughowte all agies churches tymes and doctors as we haue doone but onely let theime to kepe theire credet and scholars and to saue theire honesties bring but one or two of all that euer wrote in the compasse of Goddes Churche and thowe maiste with lesse daunger and better reason folowe theire doctrine But there is no one suche place I assure the good reader neither in scripture doctour nor councell nor contrye nor age sith the world begā I wil go so farre in this point where ther was euer stepp of any true worship of God there was praier fownd for the dead also They can not shewe me any forme of ministration in the Christian worlde that was approued whiche hath it not expressely if it be knowne that it was in deede the seruice of any auncient Churche not corrupted by theime selues The same I dare be boulde to auouche for the lawe of nature and Moises bicause it is proued already All theire bragging of thexample of the primitiue Church the massies of other contryes of the doctors of the scriptures of the councelles is but an vntollerable delusiō and abuse of the simplicity of such as be not skilfull in the authors whome they name For when the matter comes to an isshue when they be harde houlden ether in this or in any other matter thē the doctors whome they chalenged before the simple for theire partakers were but men then they might erre then they haue learned onely to credit the holy scriptures then there is nothing but goddes worde and booke with theime which elles full faine would haue the doctors consent out of whome it were but a meane place which they would not alleage for theire purpose if it might be fownde Then if deniall of all the doctors iudgements serue not theire turne In accusationem ipsarum scripturarū conuertuntur they will not stick bowldely to condēne the holy scriptures with all Irenaeus Lib. 3. Ca. 2. But if yowe thinke that I feane of theyme yowe shall see what shameful shiftes the maisters and captaines of the contrary assertion haue deuised for the defense of theime selues I dare say if the studious be but any whit indifferēt he will leaue their schoole for euer The chiefe Capitane of all these contentious heades lyke an vnshamefast childe affirmethe that the doctors praised and folowed the common errours of the ignorant people in allmose and praiers for the departed Brentius answerethe that Tertulian making mentiō of yearly oblations for the deceased In confessione VVittenber tooke his error of the hethen vsage of the gentility And Augustin he saithe affirmed purgatory praiers and almose for theime for thaffiance that he had in mennes merites towardes the remission of sinnes In Apologia Melancthon as thoughe he were no man that might erre him selfe saithe the doctors were mē and discented emongest theime selues As for the vsage of any celebratiō in the world what roume cā it haue with these champians Instit de Coena when Caluin cōfesseth in plaine termes that the celebration of the Sacrament hathe bene contaminated euen in a maner sithe the apostles tyme and first planting of our religion and to reduce it to the puritie againe the man frames a newe one of his owne so farre from superstitiō that it hath no steppe of religion or true woorship of God But well the worde of God it yet safe with theyme there a man may houlde theyme No surely they are as saulsy with the very scripture it selfe when so euer it makethe against theime Brentius before named is not ashamed to saye that he pardoneth the author of the Machabeis of his errour and ignorāce And that thowe may see the perfect image of a prowde haeretike Caluine saithe thus as for the booke of the Machabeis I will not vouchsalfe to make answer to it Mercifull God what faithfull hearte or eare coulde abide these blasphemous tonges who of vntolerable arrogancy doo so deface the examples and doctrine not onely of the pillours of the whole Christian Churche whome they impudently for lacke of a more reasonable answere condemne not onely of simple ignoraunce and errour in this point with the residew of the whole faythfull people which surely is ouer muche to say of suche lerned and godly men as they were but allso of wilfull errour and superstition in bearing and maintenaunce of the common ignoration and ethnike persuation of the worlde in theire daies and following the heathen vsage of the gentilitie And yet not content therwith these lying maisters of theire meere mercy be cōtent to offer a pardō to the author of that booke for his error which booke the whole catholike Churche of God throughe oute Christiandom taketh for canonicall scriptuture Which arrogancy and passing bowldnesse allthough I persuade my sellfe no vertuous man will in theyme alowe sith they nowe being put to they re shiftes vtterly doo condemne those fathers whose names with great oftentation they often to the simple repeate to make theyme suppose they be not with oute scripture or doctors for the proufe of theire wilfull heresies yet euē the very answer it sellfe which they imagine her in to disgrace the doctors and delude the ignoraunt is contrary to it sellfe in sundry points For they one while affirme that S. Augustine and others allowed that erroure which the people by their superstious deuotion hadde before they re tyme broght in to the prayers of the Churche and ●n other while that Iudas Machabaeus did institute it who was before these ●uthors diuers hundereths of yeares
●nd sumwhile that they borowed it of ●he gentilitye all which pointes be re●ugnant eche to other For nether ●ould that begin in oure Christian do●tours dayes which was vsed before Christes birthe nether neede they to ●orowe it of the heathen which was in ●stimation and praysed emongest the ●ewes That the prayng for the dead vvas apoin●ed to be had in the holy sacrifice by the Apo●les cōmaundement and praescription And ●hat our doctors by the maiesty of theyr na●e beare dovvne oure light aduersaries Cap. 13. BVt that this falshood may better appeare in these men we will by good testimony trye owte when and by whome the oblation and sacrifice with other ordinarie reliefes of the departed were so vniformely vsed throughe the Christian world as like wise it shall be profitable to consider who were the first authors of the contrary opinions And that the holygost by the apostles owne preaching and praescription was the first author of this solempne supplication in massies of all vsagies for the departed I might first proue by this general rule of S. Augustine Epistol ad Ianuar. et de Baptis contra donatist Lib. 4. Cap. 24. Quod vniuersa tenet ecclesia nec concilijs institutū sed semper retentum est nō nisi authoritate apostolica traditū rectissime credimus ▪ that which the whole Church obserueth and hathe allwaies so bene kept being not instituted by any councell it can not otherwise be had but by thapostles authoritie and traditiō And so by the like saing of Leo the greate Dubitandum non est quicquid in ecclesia in consuetudinem est deuotionis retentum Sermone 2. de ieiunio de traditione apostolica de S. spiritus prodire doctrina It can not be doubted but that what so euer is in the Churche by generall custom of deuotion kept and mainteined it came out of the Apostles tradition and doctrine of the holygost But I will seeke with theim by certaine demonstration and plaine ordre of reason that it must needes so be Prayinge for the deade was inuented by no man sithe the apostles dayes A sure vvay to try the beginning of any doctrine there can no one be named by the aduersary before whome I can not name an other that praide for the deade Let him fay wher he list this man or that man was the first that euer praide for the deade in Christes churche if I can not shewe an other before him so named to haue praide allso we will take him for the first author and then he fully stoppeth oure course that we can not bring this obseruation so highe as the Apostles dayes But if the aduersary can apoint me owte no time nor person that began this vsage before which I am not hable to proue it was practised then they can not let vs but we must needes driue it vpward to the apostles and Christes owne institution Yf they answer me that this vsage is crept in to the church sith the Apostles time thoughe the firste author can not be knowne I wil also prouide that there no shift shall serue theim Therfore I aske theime whether that man which first preached it was resisted by the rest of Goddes churche which before his preaching belieued the contrarie or no That is it say this doctrine of prayng for the deade when it first came in to the churche did any of the true pastors free from the same error barke like a good sheperd against the beginner of that which they cownt so greate a corruption of trueth Or all the Church was corrupted with it on one daye say what yowe thinke likest in this case answer with any probability or reason if yow can say plainely was oure doctrine euer preached ageinste or neuer if it neuer wer preached againste then it neuer began as any noueltye or newe doctrine For it coulde not be that the Church being free from that doctrine shoulde streght withe owte contradiction alowe that whiche they lyked not before Howe can any man arise in the commonwelth and bring the vtter decay of all the oulde ordres whiche he findethe and erecte vppe a newe deuise of his owne and neuer man speake a worde against him but al in one moment allowe and lyke the same and that with owte all recorde by memory or monument of any chaung But this thinge is most farre from the Churchies and Goddes pastors diligence that neuer receiued faulse doctrine withoute oppen contradiction and plaine noting the party that first began it as we shall plucke our gentlemē by the slieue a none All those that haue any skyl in the antiquitie wil beare me recorde that the pastors did neuer houlde theire peace when any wolfe did but once oppen his mouthe ageinste the sheepe They can tell that she did neuer beare the preaching or practise of any faulse and erronious doctrine for one day together ▪ then it must needes consequently folowe that the doctrine off purgatory and oblation for the departed with still consent of all nations receiued in the Catholyke Churche had no beginning after the firste institutition of our faith and woorship of god but hathe ioyned from the firste grownde of oure Christian institution in Christes faithe with that sacrifice and due honour off God which the apostles by the sugestion of the holy gost plāted in al nations with the same faith Thus I make my argumēt Note euery faulse-hood was preached against and withstanded when it is firste entered but this doctrine of purgatory and praying for the deade being alwaies vsed was neuer controwled nor gainsaide in goddes churche therfore it is no faulshood nor euer hadd any later institution then the Apostles owne prescription But what needes all this a doo by their owne consent we shall drieue this doctrine thirtene c. yeres vpwarde For so neare was Tertulian the Apostles dayes whome they confesse to haue practised that pointe of oblations for the deade And aske him where he had it for surely he inuented it not him selfe and he appointeth vs to his forfathers De corona militis he namethe the Apostles for the authors and fownders therof as of many other thinges which he there reakenethe beside that were generally receiued and nowe be of haeretikes likewise contemned We might yet steppe ij c yeare forwarde and finde emongest the Apostles oun hearers the same doctrine bothe allowed and practised but that they will make exception of Dyonisius and Clements woorkes suche shiftes men must finde that will defend faulshood Other I wil name that be owte of theire exceptions Who I thinke as wel for theire time knouledge and credit as they re excellent vertue bothe can and wil better tel the origin of that thing the authors whereof were more nigh they re tyme then oures If they woulde beleue S. August as they often professe they will the matter might soone be ended but bicause I feare they stand so muche in the corrupt conceite of their owne
qualities in theire daies yet truethe folowing tyme theire fame raised vpon so light causies easely decayd and the grownde of perpetuall infamie sattled in wise mens heartes by the wickednesse of theire attemptes remained for a testimony to all posteritye of theire shame and ignominye And this I speake not onely of the authors of oure common sectes for they neuer atteined to any shade of famous report in theire daies bicause they coulde deceiue none but simple weemen but I meane by Arius him selfe and Pelagius with the lyke who in theire owne time being of greate aesteme emōgest many whom they deceiued yet after their death more and more they grew to shame and infamie so farre that who so euer were of theire opiniōs afterward durste not yet for shame vse their name or authority for proufe of their own doctrine See yow not in our daies how freshe the name of Luther Caluin Buser with that rable was emongest the rude people whome they had woonne ether with speache or pleasure of licentious doctrine and lo nowe it decayeth in a maner or their bones be coulde The peoples sensies raueshed with the praesent pleasure of suche as they heard last lyke theyme so longe as they heare theime afterwarde theire memory remaineth onely to malediction Vidi im pium superexaltatum eleuatum sicut Cedros Libani Psal 36. transiui ecce non est quaesiui non est inuentus locus eius I haue seene the wicked exalted and set vppe as the cedre treese of libanus I passed by and loe owt of hand he is no body I sought him and his abyding can not be fownde Who so euer shall seeke for our glorious preachers with in this C. yeare he shall find theime in suche estimation then as theire forefathers be nowe that is to say to be vnworthy the naming of theire owne adherents if any of that secte liue and last so longe For let theime neuer look to com to the infamous fame of Arrius the best of all these secte maisters not worthy to be scholare to a hundreth of his folowers Thus loe is the case of haeretikes liked of fooles when they be alieue contemned of all men whē they are deade Now in the doctors of Goddes Churche it is cleane contrarie and no lesse worthy to be noted for oure purpose for theire honoure and estimation rising vpon the sure vnfallible grownde of Goddes truethe by yeares and time gathereth suche force that not onely theire memorie is in perpetuall benediction before God but theire woorkes folowe theyme in the mindes of theire posterity to theire owne aeternall praise and benefite of all theire folowers And which is muche more to be wondered at they haue so passed enuy and malice of man that euen those whiche deadly hate theyme dare not but praise theyme And suche as mislike theire doctrine and knowe of theire owne conscience that they be directly ageinste theim yet dare not openly charge theime withe faulshoode as they doo vs theire scholars but rather as I sayde seeke sum sentence owte of theime to helpe theire owne cause then with theire plaine condemnation of faulshode to refuse their authoritie S. Augustine busyed much with the Pelagians and charged by theime in disputation that he defended the Manicheis doctrine concerning originall sin for his defense and warraunt proueth vnto theime that Sancte Ambrose taught the same doctrine that he did and yet they durste not be so bowlde to call him a Manichie Dic huic Ambrosio si audes quae mihi tam petulanter obiectas Thow haeretike saith he say the same by S. Ambrose if thow dare for shame whiche thowe so saulsely and wantonly obiectes to me Lib. 2. cōtra Iulian. Looke I pray yowe Ambrose was but newe deade when his onely name did feare the heretike when other alyue of as good lerning was contemned of him and by wordes of reproche charged with the Manichaeis sect who was a wyked man of horrible sectes not long before those dayes Pelagius owte of doubt thought no better of Ambrose and Cyprian deade thē he did of Augustine and Innocentius a liue bicause they re doctrine was all one but yet the men departed wer of more authority in goddes churche then the liuing of whose continuance to the ende men were vncertayne before the proufe thereof and they re wordes being deade might easely be wrasted to sum shew of they re purpose when the authority off the lyuing coulde not admitte any suche faulse dealinge theime selues bearing witnesse of the meaning of theire owne wordes Well then oure doctoures of goddes Churche being all of holy aestimation and blessed memory doo so dase the eyes euen of theire owne aduersaries that being of the very same doctrine that we who by Goddes grace be membres of the Catholike Church be of yet they are past the malice of those which like not theire dooing and doctrine For the heretikes well knowing theim to be the authors or at the least especiall mainteiners of this oure assertion of the valewe of praiers and the holy sacrifice for the departed yet they dare not but clokedly reprehende theyme when they flowe ageinst the poore Catholikes nowe alyue withe wordes off infinite blasphemye and sclaunderous reproche Therfore I now will call vpon theime with S. Augustines wordes Coom on all the packe of yow who so euer is the prowdest protestant vpō the earth call if he dare S. Denise Sanct Clement Athanas Chrisostom Ambrose Gregory Bede we are not ashamed of theire names as yowe be of your Maisters Call these papistes for praying for theire frendes call theime Idolaters call theime superstitious call theime enimies of Christes passion say they be iniurious to his death by prouiding a newe sacrifice for sin tell theime they inuented Anniuersaries monthes mindes and yearly offeringes for theire own gayne call theime masse mungers call theime blynde gydes No yowe dare not for your eares yowe dare not disprayse oure heuenly gydes yowe dare not once name your owne Suche force hath the truethe and such feare there is in faulshood and yet these doctors must needes be in a thousande times worse case then wee be if the doctrine of purgatory and prayers be not true We may be saued or at least reasonably excused by folowing they in leading vs in faulshod cā haue no excuse of theire impietye But howe gladde may all we Catholikes be in oure heartes that haue the full consent of all theime in the proufe of oure belyfe oute of whose workes the aduersaries woulde be gladde of one lyklye sentence And whose lyfe and doctrine are so glorious in goddes Churche that theire oune aduersaries raling at vs alyue yet dare not but with greate feare once blemish theire names departed Thoughe sumtimes it brastithe oute in sum one of theime to their owne miscredit So beutifull is the light of trueth And on the other side howe miserable is theire carefull case that folowe and defend that doctrine the authors wherof they
dare nether acknouledge nor name whome all good men with open mouthe bouldely doo reprehend and theire owne scholares dare not defende Such a glorious maiesty this doctrine of theires beareth that pricketh vppe with pryde those that be alyue and blottethe out of honest memorie her doctours that be deade The first Author of that secte vvhich denieth prayers for the departed is noted his good cōdicions and cause of his error be opened vvhat kind of men haue bene most bent in all agies to that secte And that this haeresy is euer ioyned as a fit companion to other horrible sectes Cap. 14. BVt yet bicause they haue diffamed oure practise in praing and offering for the deade by referring it to a latter origin then the apostolike authority and tradition seeing we haue fathered oure vsage vpon suche as the aduersaries dare not blame we will helpe theime to seeke owte the fathers of they re faithles persuasion lest by the feare and bashfullnesse of theire owne scholares they be vnkindly forgotten Mary to find owte these obscure loyterers it wil be sumwhat painefull bicause as theeues doo they kepe by wayes and lightly treade not in honest mennes pathes For the finding owte of recordes for the testimony of our truethe we kepte the day light the highe waye of Goddes Churche All the knowne notable personagies in the holy Citye of God offered theyme selues bothe to witnesse and proue with vs. We droue this truethe from oure daies throughe the middest of that holy communitie whiche S. Augustine callethe the Citye of God and oure aduersaries will not saye otherwise but they were the liuely mēbres of that happy and heauenly felowship The high vvay of trueth We brought the practise of it to the holy Apostles by plaine accompte we went with the truethe of our cause to the lawe of Moyses from thense by like light to the lawe of nature But now for the other sorte we must leaue the cyty of God and the feloweship of these noble personagies of doctors Apostles Prophets and Patriarches and seeke on the lyfte hand in the other citie whiche is of Augustine named the cyty or commonwelthe as a man migh call it of the deuil in whiche body all practise of mischiefe and origin of erroure isshuing from that vnhappy heade to the corrupt and deadly limmes therof is to be fownde We shall heare of the aduersary persuasion then The by vvay of haeresy in the company of Anabaptistes of Arrians of Saduceis of Epicures where so euer the weedes of the common enemies corrupte seede growethe there shal we finde amongest breares and brembles this choking weede with all For as the true preachers the Apostles of Christe Iesu did sowe in the beginninge of the Christian church which was the springe of the worde of lyfe and truethe amongest other heauenly seedes of true doctrine that profitable practise for the reliefe of suche as were hense departed in the slepe of peace with the decent ordre which euer sithens the Catholyck churche hathe obedyently folowed euen so Math. 13. Inimicus homo superseminauit zizania the common enemy came afterwarde and ouersewe darnell and cockle ether for the vtter choking or elles for the especiall lette of that good seede which the Maister of this field by his houshoulde seruauntes had plentifully sowen before This common aduersarye as our maister him sellfe expoundeth it is the Deuil who as he in all other thinges beneficiall to mankinde is a greate stay so Christian mennes commoditye in this point he notably hindereth by his wicked suggestions and deuilishe diuise wherby he prouokethe many vnder the shewe of Goddes worde or bare name thereof for that is the lābes cote which this wyely woolfe boroweth to maske in to be vnkīd vnnatural and with owt all godly affectiō towards their departed frēdes The whiche cōtrary corrupt sede of false doctrine we right wel know came of the sayd aduersary bicause it was lōge after ouersowen Tert. de prescrip lerning further of Tertulian Id verū esse quodcūque primū id adulterinū quod posterius That to be true that was first taught and that to be faulse and forged which came latter And yet besydes that generall and moste certeine instructiō lerned Damascen helpeth vs to the trial of this peculiare case Doubting not to affirme that al such cogitatiōs as do entre into mānes head against the praiers or charitable woorkes for the departed be the deuilles enuious and subtill suggestions for the hinderaunce off oure brethern departed from the heauenly ioyes For thus he writeth in a sermon for the same purpose That oulde serpent saith he whose endeuoure is to corrupt and deface the good and acceptable woorkes of God and to lay snares for the entrapping of mennes soules who is muche perced through brotherly loue and brasteth in sunder for the enuy that he beareth towardes our faithe and finially is madded by oure naturall compassion one towardes an other as one that is the vtter renouncer of all good lawes he enspireth to som a fayned and faulse imagination cleane contrary to the holy constitutions that is to say that al good and acceptable workes before God shoulde no whit proffet the departed soules Our protestantes be inspired by Damascens iudgement Yf this writers iudgement be good as it is sure most sounde then must al our vnnaturall and vnkynd preachers haue an especiall inspiration of the deuill him selfe so often as they hinder fauoure and grace from the deade For as he reduced oure origin to the Apostles so he doubteth not to auouche the contrary persuation to be euidently moued by the oulde serpent of especiall enuie towardes mannes saluation And nowe if thowe list knowe in whome this subtill suggestion tooke first place and roote Of the author of this nevv sect after the longe vsage of the other according to the Apostles planting we shall make the for thy especial comfort partaker therof also We will not vse the aduersaries as they doo vs charging vs with later preaching or doctrine then the Apostles plāted and yet can nether tell where nor by whome it began But we shall by open euidence call the wolfe by his name Let an heretike but set owte fout and once open mouthe thoughe he doo no harme at all yet the watcheman of Israell hath him by the backe streght The dogges were neuer so doom in goddes Churche but they woulde barke at the first apparance of any straunge cattell For that the notation of his arising and name was not onely a warning to the present time to take heede to theire faithe but an admonition to all the posteritye to beware of the lyke And it was euer counted a refutation of an haeresye to the full to reduce it to a latter infamous author by the certaine recorde of the churchies historie The which kind of reason bothe emongest the lerned hathe singulare strenghte and is sensible for the people and of the aduersarie vtterly
greate waste of religion hathe many faulse opinions knitte together emongest which one being as principall grounde shadoweth the other lesser branchyes as nowe the blasphemy of the holy Sacrificie and Sacrament being the fountayne of theire haeresies in a maner couerethe the meaner puddelles of theire stinking doctrine And emōgest other this vnnaturall affection of forbiddinge the relyfe of the parted seemethe euer to be ioyned as an appendix to other faulshooddes For in holy Damascenes daies this secte appeared againe with other faulse doctrine as a companion of all mischiefe And to proue it to be an haeresie he seeketh oute the first founder thereof Damascen in oratione pro defunctis de haeres and findeth euē as before that vnder the deuill this Aerius was the father of that faythlesse assertion Whome he bayteth wellfauourdly in a whole oration and so driues the woolfe in to the wodde againe Then for many a day together this doctrine was dashte til the time of holy S. Bernard and Petrus the reuerent Abbate of Cluny by whiche two notable howsekeping dogges that were neuer doume in the Churchies neede this woolfe appearing once ageine was both noted and oppenly vanquished Note vvel hovv this faulshood euer ioyneth it selfe to other horrible sectes And in theire dayes this faulsehod that before was a companion of the Arrians marke well the course of thinges good reader was nowe matched with the Anabaptistes who in that time as the saide writers doo recorde did call theime selues Apostolici that is to say apostolike or folowers of the apostles so they would be termed to delude the ignorant by the bewty of that glorious name as nowe theire ofspring cal theime selues Euangelici that is to say gospellers and the pure preachers of the worde and ghospell S. Bernarde touched theim to the quick in a sermon by these wordes Lo saith he these miscreants lo these dogges Sermone 66 super ●antic they laughe vs to skorne that we baptise infāts that we pray far the dead that we require the helpe of holy sanctes they exclude Christes grace in all sortes and euery kinde in oulde and yong in the liue and in the deade Looke yowe nowe with theire gospell lyke name they were counted no better then prophane dogges of this holy father that laught so skornefullye at Christes church for praying for the deade and inuocation of sanctes and shall we make suche Iuels of theire scholars nowe a dayes In all agyes since this wielde seede was first sowne the true preachers the woorkmen of goddes haruest haue euer plucked it vpp as it first appeared The which wede was better knowne from the corne bicause it euer grewe emongest the bundels of briers and brembles and was of that waisting nature that it could not be tolerated with owte the vtter choking of the wheate This doctrine I say being of it self very perniciouse yet it is euer in cōpany of other mischiefe For the principall author of this secte was an Arian then the folowers as Bernard witnessith were Anabaptistes or worse To whome all men muche meruell that God shulde rather reueale suche misteryes of truethe then to other that were sownde in faithe And in dede I would gladly meete withe sum one good fellowe or other of that secte that weere lerned with al that he might resolue me in this doubt why this conclusion of not offering or praying for the deade of not keping thordinarie fastes of contemning the Sanctes helpe in heauen and the residewe of your newe Creede why God seeing al light of truethe cōmethe of his grace openethe these misteries alwaies and onely to suche as yowe your selues can not deny to be haeretikes I trovve no protestant can ansvver vvith reason to this point Why did he reueale in the primitiue Churche that doctrine to an Arian being an open enymie of his holy name and not to Athanasius or Epiphanius or som other blessed men of that time I stand the longer vpon this point that the worlde and who so euer is the simplest may behoulde your miserie and shame for I knowe yowe can say nothing in this case for your defense but euen beare with black blotted cōsciencies the infamy of wilfull blyndnesse Howe say yow did not your doctrine afterwarde appeare againe emongest wicked Anabaptistes that deny emongest other thinges the baptisinge of infantes it was nether reueled to Bede nor Bernard I warrant yowe Here this secte ioyneth vvih the sacramentaries a●d the rest of miscreauntes But com lower yet to oure owne time yow knowe full well we haue store of Anabaptistes of Arians of Saduceys of Epicures and of al other sectes that the deuill euer deuised suche light of truethe hath our happy age by your praeaching tell me trueth nowe be not all these whome yowe cownte haeretikes as wel as we doo be they not all I say of your opinion in this matter and not one of theime of oures Nay I will pose yowe further is not your preachinge the very redy waye to all suche extreeme blasphemies as they bowldely mainteyne did euer man fawle from the Catholike Churche to those further haeresies then yowe yet openly professe but he tooke youres by the way as a plane passage to extreme infidelitye yea your opinions doo so well stande with the other that they neede not afterward to refuse any one pointe of al your doctrine to mainteyne theire owne There is no article of Catholike doctrine but it is as much hated of theim as of your selues Helpe your selues here my maisters Marke vvell or elles all the worlde will take yowe to be in your heartes of the same sectes wherevnto your faithe is allwaies so dearely ioyned Put your heades together and tell vs whie your doctrine is so deare to the Arians and all wicked men and so hated of the holy fathers of Christes Church Yf you frame not your answer wel yow liese your credites your scholares and your honesties Wel thus haue I pointed owt your author his name was Aërius yowe must be cauled Aërians yow may kepe the name of protestauntes or Euangelistes besyde For a holy newe calling is lightly ioyned to suche men Wherby though sum simple be deceyued yet wise men be warned Or if the owlde authors of this sect be not so glorious as these newe reuiuers if they list and like so they may cal theime selues Lutherans or Caluinistes or what they will but Catholikes Althoughe Martyn Luther graunted purgatorye and praiers whith this error that suche as were there might yet by theire diuers deseruings win or lose lyfe euerlastinge as men of doubtefull state as they were before in the worlde playne agaynst oure sauiours admonition Vide Hieronimum sup 3. ad galathas Ioan. 9. and carefull warninge veniet nox quando iam nullus operari potest Woorke whiele the day lasteth for the night shall coom when no man can labour But I neede not to stand vpon this point which of nether parte
waie suche stoombling stockes as perhappes might sumwhat trouble the vnlerned who for lacke of deepe iudgement be moste subiecte to the aduersaries deceites Hovve they practise vvith the simple And with suche thus they lightely practise first by lofty lookes and highe chalēgies they crake and boste with passing bowldnes that the learned mē of the world the sage fathers of the aunciēt times al the graue coūcelles the whole vsage of the primitiue Church Great impudency in haeretikes with plaine scripture to be on theire parte And as for the contrary teaching that it came in of late with the decay of lerning and light of truethe in these barbarous tymes when superstition and darke ignorance had wasted the doctrine of the yeares past And in this bragge they stand till som Catholike man encounter with theime By whome whē they see theim selues so driuē from the standinge which they kept with greate glory before that they must be wholy naked and destitute in the face of the worlde of al such helpes as they accompted to haue for the owtewarde shewe of theire deceitful doctrine then in plaine wordes they confesse theire teachig not to hange on the antiquitye not on councelles not on Doctors nor on any man but on Goddes holy spirite and worde which can not deceiue theime And so at th ende the owlde vse of the primitiue churche the fathers and the generall councelles arrogantly contemned or rather vnworthely condemned marke well theire prety conceites they make then a matche betwene theime selues with goddes worde on the one partye and the doctors and fathers withe owte Godde● worde The sophistry of haeretikes on the other partye Affirming that they be not bound to beleue theime but where they agree with the scriptures of God And then turning theire taulke to the simple thus they preache vnto theime by a captious and foolishe demaunde whether they thinke it more reason or conuenient to beleeue the scriptures or doctors the determinatiō of the true and liuelye worde of God or elles the decrie of a generall councel which deceitfull wreasting of the state of our quaestion somwhat troobles the vnlearned which can not perceiue herby that they betray theime selues and deface theire own dooinges in so rude a defense For who seethe not nowe that they renoūce all that helpe of Councelles and Doctors which with vaūtes they clamed before whiles they impudently make a diuision or contrarietie betwixte theime and the holy scripture And we take it at theire hand as an open acknouleging of theire lacke ●her wher they praetēdid greatest store The whiche thinge if they likewise woulde confesse openly in pulpit and ●n plaine wordes as they meane nothing lesse whē they shewe the people that they were but mē that they might ●rre that they folowed the custom of the common people in their time that they are not to be receiued but where they agree with scripture and that thēi selues must trie whether they be cōsonant to the worde of God or no if they woulde I say with owt suche cloked wordes bouldely pronounce as Luther theyr Master did that they cared not for a hūdreth Augustines or Hieroms that they aestemed not the consent of all nations that they would be tried by the iudgement of no councel that they woulde purposely ronne Contrarye to the Councels decrye in al causies that they would take that for thonely trueth which is cōteined in the holy scriptures and that for scripture which theime selues thought good and last of all that for the true meaninge which agreed best to the vphoulding of errour and haeresye then woulde the people leaue these lewde masters on the plaine field which now they kepe with them one while by the praysies of the doctors and antiquitye and sumwhiles by thabasing of theime ageine and deceyt full referring all to the onely scriptures to which they saye credet may salfely be gyuen where the docters with owt daunger can not be forther followed then as they benot fownde to disagree with goddes worde So that the cause seemethe nowe to be driuen to this isshue in the eyes of thignorant whether men shoulde rather beleue the scripture or the doctors the worde of God that can not be faulse or the fathers that weere but men and therfore might erre deceiue and be deceiued But this is not the state of oure controuersie nor of any question betwixte the Catholikes and theime And that they knowe full well thoughe they craftelie cloke it with chaunge of wordes ▪ for we acknowledge most gladly that if any Doctor Prophet Apostle or Angell if it were possible preache vnto vs any thing against the word and trueth of goddes scripture that he is accursed of God and to be reiected of men But here is the stand and the point of al oure doubtes in generall note it well master protestaunt whether the auncient fathers sum of theime being in Christes time diuers of theime scholars to his apostles here lieth the doubt and diuer siti betvvixte haeretikes and Catholikes many within one hundrethe or two of yeres afterward most of theime more then a thowsand yeres since I speake of suche as we haue named in oure cause and all wonderfully learned as well in the knouledge of the secrets of goddes mysteries as the tonges all mercifully indued withe greate giftes and gracyes all exceding studious in the scriptures all hauing the same testament and written worde of god that we nowe haue all vsing meruelous diligence in the cōference of diuers placies for the true meaning and vnderstanding of the same all hauing feruent zele in teaching the christian people al at times appoynted resortinge together frō diuers partes of the world to sum one generall search in wich by humble conferens together and praier thei doubted not to obteine the spirite of truth as it was by our maister promised the question is nowe then I saie whether those holy men thus holpen by nature diligens tyme and grace be not more lyke to vnderstand the scripture thē these men wich ether lacke all these helpes or moste of theyme Secondly it foloweth there vpon whether we shoulde rather geue credit to theim affirminge purgatory and praiers for the deade to be not onely consonāt but planely proued by the scriptures or elles to oure newe aduersaries auouching these thinges to be agaynst the scripture Wherbye yow see we must not nowe reason whether we ought to beleue the doctors or the seriptures better but whether for the true sense we must not beleue the owlde fathers better then these newe fooles An ansvver to suche arguments as the haeretikes doo frame of the holy scriptures not vvell vnderstanded against the practise of Goddes Churche in praying for the deade or the doctrine of Purgatory Cap. 16. THerfore to stoppe their waye at euery turne and bicause they taulke so fast of scripture full fayne woulde I heare what scriptures they haue that make ether expressely agaynst purgatory
and praiers for the deade or elles by any one lerned mā in all the world was euer expounded for any such sense And lo now good reader what scriptures they alleage that can abide nothinge but scripture Firste owte of Ecclesiastes Cap. 11. The tree whether it faule to the southe or the north it lyeth ever wher it lighteth Then they alleage owt of S. Matthews ghospell Cap. 7. that there be two waies one to bring to heauen and thother leading streght to helle And then owte of the seconde to the Corinthians they bring in Cap. 5. howe we must all stande before the iudgement seat of Christe there to receiue eche of vs according to our workes and life and that by other mennes labour oure state can not be amended Again they alleage this sentence of the Apocalipse Cap. 14. Beati mortui c. blessed be the deade that dye in our Lorde for after that the spirite saithe that they shall rest from trauelles All which textes and the lyke of that sorte make no more ageinst purgatory then they doo ageinst hell or heauen excepte that a● Anaxagoras the philosopher saide Phisic 1. l. all thinges were in euery thinge so these diuines can finde euery texte of scripture to make for what purpose they liste and yet if the Catholikes alleage a number of scriptures and theime with the mind and iudgement of the whole worlde that doubteth not but they proue that for whiche they be recited yet they set light by theime and impudently with clamors beare men in hand that they haue no scriptures at all Which thinges as they smelle of muche arrogancie in al men so in these foulke that so malepertly controwle others where theyme selues haue no scripture at all it is vntolerable And for these which they here or elleswhere alleage I aske theyme sincerely and desire theime to tell me faithefully what doctour or wise learned man of the whole antiquity euer expounded these textes recited or any one of theyme or any other whiche yowe bring in elles when ageinst Purgatory or practise for the deade Yff they did not howe can yowe for sinne and shame dissent from the whole Churche off Christe vpon so light grounds Or howe dare yowe be so boulde that seeke in euery controuersy expresse scripture to alleage these placies whiche wyse mē nor I think your selues take for any suche purpose Or howe may yow for shame reiecte the euident word of God by vs truely reported for the triall of oure matter your selues hauing almost nothing that can be wraasted to youre sense An ansvver to the first place If yow stande to the triall of youre alleaged testimonies yowe will be muche abasshed I knowe For howe can yowe imagine that the place recited out of Ecclesiastes should further youre intent any thing at all Seeing that euen then when the wyseman spake those wordes the soule of man streght after her departure and the faule of the bodye continued not where it first fell for the iuste had a place of abidinge and rest in the inferiour partes whiche was called of Ezechias the gate of helle Isai 38. In the ghospel Sinus Abrahae the bosom of Abraham and nowe Lymbus Patrum in whiche they all abode till they were deliuered by the bloude and trauell of oure sauioure Iesus Bern. ser 4 de fest omnium sanct Amb. super 5. ad Romanos Withe whome they after were translated to the aeternal ioyes of heauen Whiche thinge if it be true as it can not but be true and certaine whiche the whole course of scripture the article of oure faithe in Christes descension in to hel and al the auncient fathers doo constantly setforth what blindnes be they in then that bring this place againste Purgatorie which as it is a stay of certaine for a time from heauen so the other before Christe was the staye off all And therefore it is plaine that this faulynge of the tree meanithe nothinge lesse then that euery man shoulde streght vpon his departure be conueyde ether to hell or heauen Or if any wedded to Caluines blasphemous and vnfaithefull paradoxies doo with Purgatory deny the fathers place of abode before the cooming of Christe and impugne the beleefe of Goddes churche so muche that he withstand the article of oure Crede for Christes descendinge in to hell or turne the cause of his going into hel to sum other purpose then the lowsing of theire captiuity that there were in expectation of his ioyfull apparance Caluins absurde doctrin is refuted yet I woulde demaunde so much of Caluins successor or scholare seeing he wil of this figuratiue speach of the trees faulīg gether so grounded and generall a rule that with owt delay euery man must to heauē or hel streght after his death there to remaine in perpetuall state of his faule in the nexte life ether good or badde I woulde aske of him I saye what he thinketh by all those that were by the Prophets Apostles or Christe him selfe raysed vppe againe from deathe to lyfe Who receiuing by death that faule by theire accompt must needes abide where they first fell and so not in case to be reuoked by this theire faulse conclusion they diminishe the powre of the spirite in woorking their raisinge againe Or elles they must impute deceite to the holy men and oure master Christe whiche abhorreth me ●o speake for that they raysed theyme not beinge perfectely deade but in sum deadlye traunce or apparance of deathe But bicause the soule of Lazarus was nowe iiij daies owte of his bodye before Christe wroght vpon him The state of such in the next vvorlde as by goddes omnipotency vvere raised to lyfe againe it is sure and most certaine that it had sum place of abyding after the separation from the fleshe I can not thinke that his soule was in heauen nor it is not like that oure sauioure woulde so muche abase the happy condicion of him whome he loued so well as to reduce him to the vncertaine state of this lyfe I will define in this my ignorance nothing touching the secrettes of goddes wisdom herin But very like it is that the parties raysed from theire faule and deathe were not in the ioyes of heauen As before Christes death I am sure they were not but I speake of Tabitha also or other reuoked by thapostles handes that then after Christes passion might full well diyng in perfect state of lyfe go streght to heauen of suche I say it is very reasonable that they were not in the ioyes of thelect For elles Tabitha shoulde not haue had suche a benefite by her almose as the fathers doo witnesse she hadde And they vse her for an exāple of the benefite which may rise to one after departure by charitable woorkes doone in this lyfe It had bene a smaule pleasure to haue plucked her from hauen to this mortalitye againe and misery of oure common lyfe and I trowe no
that haste before thyne eyes in these forsakers an image and a perfect platte of damnable desperation Mightily hathe God executed this sentēce of iudgemēt vpon al sortes of mē that hath withstand the trueth The Iewes feeling it till this day the folowers of Mahomet the Arians and all other haeretikes that haue forsaken the felowship of the faithfull The lamē table case of haeretikes and haue left the fowntaine of lyfe cowld neuer be reduced to the truethe coulde neuer see they re owne misery bicause God hath giuen theime ouer for their withstanding And let not the forsakers wōder that I shoulde compare theire case to the misery of the Iewes August in psal 30 seeing S. Augustine confesseth that all haeretikes be much more blinded then they bicause the Prophets speake more plainely of the Churche which properly all haeretikes doo impugne then they doo of Christe him self whome the prowde Iewes doo contemne And therefore let vs that be Catholikes blesse Goddes name for euer that he hath not taken his mercye from vs that he hathe not dealte with vs according to oure sinnes We haue offended surely and haue deserued this plage our Priestes haue offended our Princies haue offended and oure People haue offended yet for his own name sake he hath loked vpon vs and hathe kept vs withe in the howsehould of saluation Glory and honoure be to his holy name for euer more Amen FINIS Quoniam Liber iste Anglico Idiomate conscriptus est lectus ab Anglis Sacrae Theologiae peritis mihi optimè notis qui eum per omnia Catholicum nationi Anglicae perutilem attestantur iudico expedire vt admissus imprimatur Itae testor Cunnerus Petri de Browershauen Pastor Sancti Petri Louàniensis indignus 8. Martij an 1564. Stilo Brabantiae THE ARGVMENTES of euery Chapiter of bothe the Bookes Of the first Booke THe Praeface where in be noted two sortes of haeretikes th one pretending vertue thother openly professing vice And that oure time is more troubled by this second sort VVith a briefe note of the Authors principall intent in this Treatise praef argu fol. 9. Cap. 1 That often after oure sinnes be forgiuen by the sacrament of poenaunce there remaineth summe due of temporall pounishment for the satisfying of goddes iustice and som recompense of the offensies past fol. 12. Cap. 2 The double and doubtefull shiftes of our aduersaries pressed by this conclusion are remoued and it is proued agaynst one sort that these foresayde skourgies were in dede pounishments for sinnes remitted And against thother secte that this trāsitory paine hath often endured in the nexte liefe fo 29. Cap. 3 That the practise of Christes churche in the courte of binding and lousing mannes sinnes dothe lieuely sett fourthe the ordre of Goddes iustice in the nexte liefe and prooue Purgatory fol. 39. Cap. 4 That the manyfoulde workes and fructes of poenaunce whiche all godly men haue charged theime selues withe all for theire own sinnes remitted were in respect of Purgatory paines and forthe auoyding of goddes iudgement tēporall as well as aeternall in the nexte lyfe fol. 44. Cap. 5 A briefe ioyning in reason and argument vpon the proued groundes withe the aduersaries for the declaration and proufe of Purgatory fol. 53. Cap. 6 That Purgatory paines doothe not onely serue Goddes iustice for the poonishement of sinne but also cleanse and qualify the soule of man defiled for the more seemely entraunce into the holy placies with conference of certaine textes of scripture for that purpose fol. 56. Cap. 7 That there is a particulare iudgement and priuate accompte to be made at euery mannes departure of his seuerall actes and dedes with certaine of the fathers minds touching the textes of scripture alleaged before fol. 64. Cap. 8 Origen is alleaged for oure cause vpon whose errour in a matter sumwhat apperteyninge to oure pupose S. Augustines iudgement is more largely soght and there with it is declared by testimony of diuerse holy authors what sinnes be chefely purged in that temporall fyre fol. 73. Cap. 9 A forther declaration of this pointe for the better vnderstanding of the doctoures wordes Wherein it is opened howe Purgatory is ordeined for mortal sinnes and howe for smauler offenses who are like to feele that grefe and who not at all fol 82. Cap. 10 A place alleaged for Purgatory owte of S. Matthewe withe certeine of the Auncient fathers iudgements vpon the same fol. 88. Cap. 11 An answer to certaine obiections of the aduersaries moued vpon the diuersity of meanings which they see geuen in the fathers writinges of the scriptures before alleaged for Purgatory and that this doctrine of the Churche standethe not againste the sufficiency off Christes Passion fol. 98. Cap. 12 An euident and most certaine demonstration of the truethe of Purgatory and the greuousnesse thereof vttered by the praiers and wordes of the holy doctoures and by sum extraordinary workes of God beside fo 105. Cap. 13 Of the nature and condicion of Purgatory fire the difference of theire state that be in it from the damned in hell with the conclusion of this Booke folio 117. An end of the Argumentes of the first Booke ARGVMENTA CAPIT LIBRI II. TThe preface of this booke wherein the matter of the treatise and the ordre of the Authors poceeding be briefely opened fol. 23. Cap. 1 That there be certaine sinnes whiche may be forgeuen in the nexte lyfe and that the deserued poonishement for the same may be eased or vtterly released before the extreme sentence be to the vtmost executed fol. 127. Cap. That the faithful soules in Purgatory being novve past the state of deseruing and not in case to help theime selues may yet receiue benefite by the woorkes of the lyuing to whome they be perfectly knitte as felowe membres of one body folio 132. Cap. 3 What the Churche of God hathe euer principally practised for the soules departed by the warraunt of holy scripture with the defense of the Machabees holy history against the heretikes of oure time folio 137. Cap. 4 That the funeralles of the Patriarches bothe in the lawe of nature and Moyses and Christe had practise in theime for the reliefe of the soules departed folio 146. Cap. 5 Man may be relieued after his departure ether by the almose whiche he gaue in his lyfe time or by that which is prouided by his testament to be geuen after his death or elles by that almose whiche other men doo bestowe for his soules sake of theire own gooddes fol. 158. Cap. 6 Of certaine offeringes or publike almose presented to God for the deceased in the time of the holy sacrifice at mennes burialles and other customable daies of theire memories and of the sundry mindes kepte in the primitiue Churche for the departed fol. 169. Cap. 7 That the benefite of praier and allmose apperteineth not to suche as dye in mortall sinne though in the doubtefull case of mannes beeing the Church vseth to pray for all departed in Christes faithe fol. 177. Cap. 8 What that holy sacrifice is whiche was euer counted so beneficiall to the liue and deade The punishment of oure sinnes by the heuy losse thereof The greate hatered whiche the diuell and all his side hath euer borne towardes Christes aeternall priesthood and the sacrifice of the Churche And that by the saide sacrifice of the Masse the soules departed are especially relieued folio 187. Cap. 9 That the practise of any pointe in religion maketh the moste open shewe of the fathers faithe And that all holy men haue in plaine wordes and moste godly praiers vttered their beliefe in our matter fol. 195. Cap. 10 That we and all nations receiued this vsage of praing and sacrificing for the departed at our first conuersion to Christes faith And that this article was not onely confirmed by miracle amongest the rest but seuerally by signes and woonders approued by it selfe An that the Churche is growne to such beauty by the fructe of this faith fol. 210. Cap. 11 That in euery ordre or vsage of celebration of the blessed Sacrament and Sacrifice through owte the Christian worlde since Christes time there hath bene a solemne supplication for the soules departed fol. 220. Cap. 12 The haeretikes of oure time and contry be yet further vrged withe the practise of prayiers for the deceased theire conrary communion is compared with the owlde vsage of Celebration They are ashamed of the firste originall off theire Christian faithe they are weery of theire owne seruice they are kepte in ordre by the wisdome of the Ciuile magistrates and are forced to refuse all the Doctors fol. 230. Cap. 13 That the praying for the dead was appointed to be had in the holy sacrifice by the Apostles commaundement and praescription And that our doctors by the maiesty of their name beare downe oure light aduersaries fol. 242. Cap. 14 The first Author of that secte whiche denieth prayers for the departed is noted his good condicions and cause of his error be opened what kind of men haue bene most bent in all agies to that secte And that this haeresy is euer ioyned as a fit companion to other horrible sectes fol. 257. Cap. 15 Their falshood is condemned and the Catholike truethe approued by the authority of holy Councelles Their pride in cōtemning and the Catholikes humility in obediēt receiuing the same And a sleight wherby the heretikes deceiue the people is detected f. 267 Cap. 16 An answer to suche arguments as the haeretikes doo frame of the holy scriptures not well vnderstanded against the practise of Goddes Churche in praying for the deade or the doctrine of Purgatory fol. 274. Cap. 17 An answer to theire negatiue argument with the conclusion of the Booke fol. 281. FINIS