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A08453 The fountaine and vvelspring of all variance, sedition, and deadlie hate Wherein is declared at large, the opinion of the famous diuine Hiperius, and the consent of the doctors from S. Peter the Apostle his time, and the primitiue Church in order to this age: expresly set downe, that Rome in Italie is signified and noted by the name of Babylon, mentioned in the 14. 17. and 18. chapters of the Reuelation of S. Iohn. Ocland, Christopher, d. 1590? 1589 (1589) STC 18778; ESTC S113367 31,748 48

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house the feare of god was vpon al the kingdomes of the earth when they had heard that the lord had fought against the the enemies of Israel and so the Kingdome of Iehoshophat was quiet and God gaue him rest on euery side likewise in the 14. Chap. of Exodus in the end of the same it is thus written But the children of Israell walked vpon the drie land through the middest of the sea And it followeth in the 15. Chap. Then sang Moses and the children of Israell this song vnto the Lord in this maner I will sing vnto the Lord for hee hath triumped gloriously the horse and him that rode on him with all the rest hath be ouerthrowen in the sea The Lord is my strength and praise he is become my saluation he is my God he is my fathers God and I wil exalt him The Lord is a man of war his name is Iehouah c. Let vs thus pray praise God with y ● Israelites for the ouerthrow of our enemis in the Sea and he wil continue our good and merciful God Let vs continue to go to the temple with Iehosophat and there with the harmonie of our cleane soules and bodies giue there the Sacrifice of thanksgiuing Let vs sing th● 21 Psalme Domine propter robur immisum gaudet Regina quia tu author illi fuisti victoriae exultat seriò O Lord the Queene re●oiceth for the strength that thou hast sent vpon her and because thou hast bene the principall giuer of victory to her she reioiseth earnestly Let her Maiesty spiritually reioise as she doth Let vs her Subiectes take bolde heartes and be full of courage if at any time forraine enemie should make attempt The Lord will not forsake them that put their trust in him God grant her Highnesse a long life a long and most prosperous raigne God of his mercie continue his blessings vpon this Realme of England Amen FINIS The latter daies of the world ●●hessalo ●●●ichrist Variance and deadlie discord throughout Christ●ndome The Pope the cause of variance The Pope exalteth himself aboue all that is called God The pride of y ● Pope Pardons for murder The Pope knowen to bee An●echrist by his habitation and place 1 Pet. 5. Papias Eus. bi● Tertullian Origines Hi●ronimus S. Augustine Nero and others persecuted the Christians The Popes doe the same The testimony of the Church of Leodia against Rome S. Barnard Stukley trator maintained by the Pope The popes men vanquished by the L. Gray in Ireand Church plate taken out of the Vestries by the Pope to make war The wicked liues of the Popes Raphael Volaterranus Xistus the 4. Innocentius the eight Alexander the sixt I●lius the second Clement the seuenth Paulus tertius These Popes not men but monsters of men Catholiqu●s Exhortation to the Papists to recurne to the true Church Equal auctority giuen to all the Apostles to forgiue sins Hierarchia Succession by i●heritanc Succession by Election 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 is there is the Church Hierusalem fo●s●ken much more Rome Harlots or curtesans in Rome To read scripture bringeth k●●wledge vnderstanding The Pope the head of the holy league that practiseth to trouble molest England The Spaniard his preparatiō for war against England many yeares The Popes pr●mise to saue the soules of them that perish The Pope a murderer Not found in scripture that the Apostles di● assigne Princes c●ownes But y ● Popes do it Constantines donations puffed vp th● Se● of Rome with pride The Spaniard tooke in hand the execution of the Popes malice 1588. The cruel●●● of the Sp●●●ards The Strapado England beware England call vnto the Lord trust in him England be sory lament for thy sinnes past England cease not to pray continual●y Our en●mies hate vs fo●●eligion The heathen mans l●●●on ●o fight for our countri● bound by gods law to defend our Prince and Countrey Comfo●t of the Q●eenes 〈◊〉 and her most wi●e c●uns●ll England furnished with Armour and Artillery as it was neuer in any princes daies 〈◊〉 this time The commen●ation of the Q●eene Elibeth H●r vertues worthy qualities H●r knowledg in the Greeke Latine and other t●ngues He● 〈◊〉 wonde●ful ●●liuerāce from trea●on at ●●me The long raigne of a man princes Salomon Short raignes of prince what it b●tokeneth The long ra●gne of a Prince The Quee●s care and ●●udy to stop and represse the rage and ●u●ie practised in France an in y ● Low-countries Sir Phillip Sidney Carolus ●eobussextus king of Scots lamented his vnripe death The Lord Charles Howard Lord Admirall of England His going to Sea in the deepe of winter 1587. His victory ouer the Spaniards The firing of the Spanish Ships The Queenes going to Paul● Chu●ch t● 〈◊〉 thanks vnto God The Queenes clemencie wonde●full 〈◊〉 euen to the enemy England be continually mindfull of y ● great benefites receiued at Gods hand 〈…〉
wilde Irish to rebellion and armed shippes and Souldiors to infringe the publike peace there who not long after their arriuall had their welcome so that of faure or fiue hundred not past twentie escaped aliue The English vnder the conduct of the Lord Gray Lord Deputie of Ireland atchieuing the victorie vpon the Pope his Italians and Spaniardes the fourth day after they came to the place where these Strangers had entrenched themselues in good order of war He remarke well gentle Reader the great goodnes and mercy of God towards our most gratious Quéene Elizabeth and her realme of England and Ireland Note the wisedome forwardnes and diligence of the Noble man chief● Captaine and General of her highnes Armie How he spared not to catch hold of oportunitie in the colde and deepe of the winter according to the saying Principijs obsta arripienda est occatio For if they with the badge of the crosse Keies of their brests might haue bene suffered to harbour the winter time there this small sparke would haue growen to a bigger flame and not so easilie haue beene quenched But the Lords of England be so hot with their souldiers vnder them that let the enemies make triall when they will let them trust to it they shalbe fought withal if they attempt to come on land before the swimming growen of the Sea-sicknes bee quite out of their heads The Pope can and will raise warre to spill Christian bloud take out of the Uestries Church plate for not any must controlle him exact tasks vpon his Cleargie to cause his Cardinals and Bishops to giue contribution to bestow the same where it pleaseth him to murther innocents to force wiues and widowes to deflower virgins For these be the fruits of warre the benefits that be reaped vpon insolent victories Now take in few woordes of what godly conuersa●ion and life Popes haue bene of late time that either the Catholiques may be ashamed of such spirituall and holy Fathers or els in time to forsake them and to begin to abhor and detest them and their most wicked and abhominable actions and to learne to bee of better vnderstanding than they haue bene For the successor is commonly worsse and more had than his predecessour Séeke and sée the writer Raphaell Volaterranus whether I make true report of them or no. Search in other faithfull Historiographers what Xistus the 4. was in his Sée of Rome A man not caring so hee might haue his will whether it were right or wrong raising warre for euerie trifling matter selling benefices and offices for mony rouling himselfe middle among harlots What was Innocentius the eight a man both couetous and factious giuen to set out the Sword and pike boasting aboue measure of his aduoultries and bastard Children and occupied continuallie in aduauncing and promooting them to high dignities What was Alexander the sixt a man of lust and carnal desire that it is to be wondred at and for shame almost not to be named which thing very cunningly did he paint out which wrote these two verses of his Daughter Hoc tumulo Dormit Lucretia nomi●●e sed re Thais Alexandrifilia Sponsa nurus In this graue sleepes Lucretia so men her cal'd by name Yet Thais she by maners might and eke be clipt for fame Daughter she was to Alexander the Pope and sometime wife And married was to bastard his marke here the fathers life This Alexander created of his bastard sonnes not without great ignominy to true Nobilitie Earles Dukes and marquesses and did beare the charge of the Armie of the which is sonne was generall Of this sort and facultie was Iulius the second and likewise also like to these was Leo the tenth And to these is annexed Clement the 7. a subuerter and destroyer both of Rome and of his natiue soile the city of Florentia And after these succéedeth Paulus tertius for his auarice wicked liuing incest tyrany and other horrible crimes so odious that men indewed with any sparke of honesty and godlines abhorre to remember them the Heauens the Earth and the Seas wil flie away from the hearing of them Heere the place moouing me thereto let such as bee addicted to the Church of Rome beware in season that they be no longer seduced and take héed and learne to knowe the bad from the good by that token which our Lorde Christ himselfe gaue saying Ex fructibus eorurn cognoscetis eos Ye shall know them by their fruits These Popes afore rehearsed were not men but monsters of men and to read their liues trulie penned and set down and déepely to consider of it were sufficient to drawe away any man from that selfe-will loue and confidence they haue put in that whoorish and Babilonicall Church of Rome Homines sunt ergo errare labi possūt saith he But these be men monsters of men as I haue already said and their errors be so grosse and palpable that children and boyes sée them and are able to confute them their maners actions so wicked and vicious that euery good Christian must condemne them I am bere further to vse a few wordes to the Papistes who call and terme themselues Catholiques by a word as it should seeme that many of them doo not well vnderstand or if they doo they haue no great reason to vse it For Catholique a Gréeke word signifieth vniuersall in English and Ecclesia Catholica in our Cr●●de or Articles of our beliefe hath Sanctam set afore that is the Catholique Church of God dispearsed wheresoeuer it bee vppon the fa●e of the Earth not tied to any one certaine or terminate place but vniuersall where the Congregation small or bigge is dispersed throughout the world professing truly Christ and his holy Gospell We beléeue one holy vniuersall Church to be How holy the Romish Church is let indifferent men iudge where such good liuers as the Pope● aboue mencioned be the chiefe a●●ors in the plaie So the word Catholike maketh quite against the papists who would haue the true church at Rome depending vpō the same Romish church as tied to one certaine place where many of the Bishops of the same church haue bin at this day be as wicked and cruell as were in times past Phalaris Dionysius Nero or Diocletian Nam vitiato capite viti●ntur mēbra corporis The head being corrupt néedes must the members of the body be infected with corruptiō I therfore pray you which be not yet come out of the mistie clouds of Papisme in the bloud and bowels of our Lorde Iesus Christ deceiue not your selues Look wel about you in time Pin not your faith vppon another mans sléeue No man can make attonement for his brothers soule It is the bloud of Iesus Christ the son of God that clenseth vs from all sin as witnesseth S Iohn in the first Chapter of his Epistle Againe he the same Apostle saith in the same
slaughter of their men made and caused by our forces were constrained to cast ouer-boord their fine Iennets and horses and waxed glad when night with darkenesse drewe on setting indirect courses that the Englishe might with more dificultie espie finde or follow them in the morning ensuing There were from the beginning till this time taken Prisoners and Spanishe shippes soo●cke and spoyled by the English forces and brasen péeces and Artillery taken as the true number of them apeareth in books already printed by the meanes aforesaid the pursuit was omitted and the spaniardes sought their way furthest about by the craggie rocks and Sea shore of Scotland to the west of Ireland Where God with windes and soule weather so tossed the remain of the Armado that 17 of the greatest ships there wracked were drowned with y ● losse of some thowsands of their men beside artillerie ordinance and other lading that perished in the water Thus they that came to kil vs were killed taken or drowned except those that escaped by flieng and running away and God fought for England with his mightie hand and stretched out arme when the force of the English had ceased to pursue Let any reasonable man or others that haue any experience be Iudge This proud and haughtie nation and people that came to conquer England to kil man woman and child to make the countrie wast to take the land into their owne possession if they had not bene sore afraide and self also the Yron pellets and blowes of our English ordinance and the forces of the Lord Charles Howard and his most famous band of Mariners and souldiers to the losse of liues of their men and great spoile of their ships would haue returned home the same way they came but they durst not but sought Spaine the farthest way about The fame of this victorie howsoeuer the Spaniardes may or will colour it is spread ouer all Europe Asia and part of Africa insomuch that the heathē haue our renowmed Quéen in admiration for her vertues princely qualities royall hart and courage and principally for this victorie atchieued vpon the Spaniarde O most high O most mighty O most mercifull God how good and gratious diddest thou shew thy self to our Quéene Elizabeth to her dominions and territories to her subiects and people How godly how prudently how thankfully did her Maiestie at the last comming home and returne of the L. Admirall from the Seas attribute and ascribe this victorie gotten by fight vpon the Sea only to God giuing him all the praise honor and glorie for the same speaking in open audience of her Nobilitie Ladies and gentlemen in Court these words which one of late hath p●uned in a book written in latine verse of her Highnesse The verses follow Carole laudo tuas virtutes laudo viriles Inuictosque tuos animos comitumque tuorum Quod loquor ex animo loquor O attendite quaeso Non vis vlla hominū non tu praeclare Dynasta Non comites socijque tui non Anglica classis Est Deus aeternus Deus est qui solus vnus Effecit totam vt victrix celebrata per orbem Ore ferar populi domi vt secura quiescam Illi tota rei benè gestae gloria detur Illi totus honor sit ei sui gloria soli And her Grace did not onely in spéech but also in action apparant to the whole world shewit when her Highnesse accompanied with the Bishops of the Realme and Nobilitie came through the stréetes to the temple of S. Paule within the citie of London knéeling humbly within the west doore of the same Church gaue with heart mind and lowlines of body thanks to God for his mercies benefites bestowed vpon her and her people and after heard a sermon at Paules crosse tending to the same end As this was done and said before like a most Christian Lady and Quéene so it is worthy of remembrance that contrarie to the custome of man and womans nature prouoked irritated and stirred vp before to wrath displeasure vpon outrage mali●e practised by any enemie her Grace with a most charitable and pitifull heart cherished and gaue almes meate and drinke to the Spaniards captiues and taken prisoners forbidding that any iniurie or violence should be proffered vnto them according to the counsell of S. Paule Vince bono malum Ouercome the euill with doing good Here I admonish and exhort all true English of euerie degrée to print in memorie at the benefites afore rehearsed receiued by the mercie of God and daily and ha●rely to be thankfull for the same and to learne with the Prophet to say sing Misericordias Domini in aeternū cantabo My song shal be alwaies of the louing kindnes mercies of the lord with my mouth wil I euer be shewing of thy truth from one generation to another Again in the 146 Psal. Praise the Lord O my soule while I liue will I praise the Lord yea as long as I haue any being I wil sing praises vnto my God Let vs follow the example of Mardocheus the 9 chap. of Hest. who inioyned the Iewes the 14 day of the moneth of Adar and the 15 day of the same euery yeare according to the daies wherein the Iewes rested from their enemies and the moneth which was turned to them from sorrowe to ioy and from mourning into a day of myrth to kéepe them the dayes of feasting and ioy and to send presents euery man to his neighbour giftes to the poore wherfore was this done and enioined them Because Haman the Iewes Aduersarie had imagined against the Iewes to destroy them had cast Pur that is a lot to consume destroy them Let vs follow Iehoshophat who when the childrē of Moab the children of Ammon came against him to battaile did séeke the Lord proclaimed a fast throughout all Iuda So did the Londiners God be praised for it the English fearing God throughout all the Realme and continued in praier from morning vnto night I wish and exhort them in the Lord to kéep a memoriall thereof oftentimes to pray and often to fast many times to giue thankes for the manifold blessings of God poured vpon vs in preseruing as he hath done the Quéens Maiesties person from treason and imminent danger and peril in sending her Grace a long and gratious raigne that it may please him to send her victorie ouer her enemies as he hath done if any here after shal arise So shal it come to passe that as Iehoshaphat the king and the Iewes without any stroke stroken on their parts had their enemies ouerthrowen at gods hand they gathered the spoile 3 daies the 4 day they assembled thēselues in the vally Berracah there blessed y e lord then euery man returned with Iehoshophat to go again to Ierusalem with ioy And they came to Ierusalem with viols with harps with tr●mpets euen vnto the lords