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A08891 The fal of Babel By the confusion of tongues directly proving against the Papists of this, and former ages; that a view of their writings, and bookes being taken; cannot be discerned by any man living, what they would say, or how be vnderstoode, in the question of the sacrifice of the masse, the reall presence or transubstantiation, but in explaning their mindes they fall vpon such termes, as the Protestants vse and allow. Further in the question of the Popes supremacy is shevved, how they abuse an authority of the auncient father St. Cyprian, a canon of the I Niceene counsell, and the ecclesiastical historie of Socrates, and Sozomen. And lastly is set downe a briefe of the sucession of Popes in the sea of Rome for these 1600 yeeres togither; ... By Iohn Panke. Panke, John. 1608 (1608) STC 19171; ESTC S102341 167,339 204

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Pighius Sanders and Caietane Bellarmine crying aime and fully consenting with neither But to go forward from Eugenius 4. last mentioned there are none memorable vntil wee come to Alexander 6. vnto whom these succeeded Pius 3. Iulius 2. Leo 10. Adrianus 6. Clemens 7. Paulus 3. Iulius 3. Marcellus 2. Paulus 4. Pius 4. Pius 5. Gregorie 13. Sextus 5. Vrbanus 7. Gregory 14. Innocentius 9. And Clemens 8. now 2. yeers since dead For Alexander 6. I finde no wordes aunswerable to his wickednesses an Oratour may holde a scroule in his hande and not speake beeing astonied to thinke what an husbande the spouse of Christ had all the while he liued vincit officium lingua sceleris magnitudo saith Lactantius the waight of the mischeife kept the tongue silent He excelled in al kinde of wickednesse mischeife he had many bastards one he made Duke of Valence who was called Caesar Borgia whome hee intended to haue made Lord of al Italy Read of him and his villanies in their owne Italian historie of Guictiardin● His sonne himselfe died of the same poisoned wine which was prepared for certaine Cardinals such a serpent held the seat of Peter 10. yeares til his owne poison killed him Iulius 2. was a notable warrior he moued warre against the Lords of Bonony Perusium and the land about against the Venetians Duke of Ferarra the state of Genua and the French king and therfore as his owne parasite saith of him Hee was more honourable in warlike prowesse than in bishoplike practise For the rest that follow from Iulius 2. to Clemens 8. the times are yet too young for vs to know any memorable act of theirs they who come after vs shall peradventure haue their dealings also brought to light Thus much at last I would haue you to remember Reade the answere vnto a seditious Bull sent into England by Pyus 5. anno dom 1569 by Iohn Iuell late bishop of Salisbury in the 12 yeare of her Maiesties raigne Regnum Angliae proscripfit praedaeque exposuit Geneb chron l. 4 fol. 5. Vrbanus 1169. God let Queen Elizabeth see 7. of her enimies Popes of Rome aliue dead viz. Pius 5. Gregory 13. Sixtus 7. Gregory 14. Innocentius 9 Clemens 8. That Pius the fift and Gregory the thirteenth two of the last recited Popes did mightily bend themselues against Queene Elizabeth of blessed memory against the whole nobility and commons of the Realme by excommunicating of her person and absolving of her subiects from their oath and obedience and exposed the realme and state to strangers as a pray as much as in them lay But the great God lehova who her Maiestie did alwaies serue in sincerity and truth gaue her health peace and life to see the decay not only of them two but of alitter of rowre more whose ends shee saw and the seaventh in beeing when God called her highnesse to her blessed sleep Thus Tuberius haue I run over many histories in briefe to giue you a taste both howe the succession and chaire of Rome hath stood as also a touch of the faith life honesty and manners of the men in the Chare for these 1600. yeeres yet you must not think that I haue said the hundred part which might be by some others followed touching the inlarging of every thing whereof I haue discoursed And touching the former part of our conference which was concerning some points of religion do but view them againe and consider their manner of handling them by many falshoodes and sleights weaknesse in arguments dissentiō one amongst an other and there is no question but you will giue iudgement against them and settle your perswasion with vs because they themselues haue set it downe for a ruled case that wheresoever there is any craft sleight shift obliquity or in any one point a manifest lie there cannot be the simplicitie of trueth And that there is such with them let him that wil not beleeue me first view their bookes then confute I pray God that you may make such vse of my labour herein as I wish and I know the trueth of it doth deserue Tuberius I thanke you much for your paines but more for your so well wishing vnto me God I hope will incline my hearte to the apprehension of the truth of your discourse herein And so fare you well The names of the Bishops or Popes of Rome for these 1600. yeeres according to the vsuall account S. Peter Lynus Cletus Clemens Anacletus Euaristus Alexander Sixtus Telesphorus Higinus Pius Anicetus Soter Eleutherius Victor Zepherinus Calixtus Vrbanus Pontianus Anterus Fabianus Cornelius Lucius Stephanus Sixtus 2. Dionisius Felix Eutichianus Caius Marcellinus the first 300. yeeres Marcellus Eusebius Melchiades Silvester Marcus Iulius Liberius Felix 2. Damasus Siricius Anastasius Innocentius Sozomus Bonifacius Celestinus Sixtus ● Leo. Hillarius Simplicius Felix 3. Gelacius Anastatius 2. Symmachus Hormisda Iohannes Felix 4. Bonifacius 2. Iohannes 2. Agapetus Silverius Vigilius Pelagius Iohannes 3. Benedictus Pelagius 2. Gregorius the next 300. yeeres Sabinianus Bonifacius 3. Bonifacius 4. Deus dedit Bonifacius 5. Honorius Severinus Iohannes 4. Theodorus Martinus Eugenius Vitalianus Adeodatus Domnus Agatho Leo 2. Benedictus 2. Iohannes 5. Cuno Sergius Iohannes 6. Iohannes 7. Sisinnius Constantinus Gregory 2. Gregorius 3. Zacharias Stephanus 2. Stephanus 3 Paulus Stephanus 4. Adrianus Leo 3. Stephanus 5. Pascalis Eugenius 2. Valentinus Gregorius 4. Sergius 2. Leo 4. Benedictus 3. Nicholaus in the yeere 858. Adrianus 2. Ioannes 8. Martinus 2. Adrianus 3. Stephanus 6. Formosus Bonifacius 6. Stephanus 7. Romanus Theodorus 2. Ioannes 9. Benedictus 4. Leo 5. Christophorus Sergius 3. Anastasius 3. Lando Ioannes 10. Leo 6. Stephanus 8. Ioannes 9. Leo 7. Stephanus 9. Martinus 3. Agapetus 2. Ioannes 12. Leo 8. Ioannes 13. Domnus 2. Benedictus 5. Banifacius 7. Benedictus 6. Ioannes 14. Ioannes 15. Ioannes 16. Gregory 5. Syluester 2. Ioannes 17. now are wee come to the 1000. yeere Ioannes 18. Sergius 4. Bonedictus 7. Ioannes 19. Benedictus 8. Gregorius 6. Clemens 2. Damasus 2. Leo 9. Victor 2. Stephanus 10. Nicolaus 2. Alexander 2. Gregorius 7. Victor 3. Vrbanus 2. Paschalis 2. Gelasius 2. Calixtus 2. Honorius 2. Innocentius 2. Celestinus 2. Lucius 2. Eugenius 3. Anastasius 4. Adrianus 4. Alexander 3. Lucius 3. Vibanus 3. Gregorius 8. Clemens 3. Celestinus 3. Innocentius 3. Honorius 3. Gregorius 9. Celestinus 4. Innocentius 4. Alexander 4. Clemens 4. Gregory 10. Innocentius 5. Adrianus 5. Ioannes 20. Nicolaus 3. Martinus 4. Honorius 4. Nicolaus 4. Celestinus Bonifacius 8. Benedictus 9. Clemens 5. Ioannes 22. Benedictus 10. Clemens 6. Inno●entius 6. Vrbanus 5. Gregorius 11. Vrbanus 6. Bonifacius 9. Innocentius 7. Gregorius 12. Alexander 5. Ioannes 23. Martinus 5. Eugenius 4. Nicholaus 5. Calixtus 3. Pius 2. Paulus 2. Sixtus 4. Innocentius ● Alexāder 6. heere wee are come well neere to the 1500. yere Pius 3. Iulius 2. Leo 10. Adrianus 6. Clemens 7. Paulus 3. Iulius 3. Marcellus ● Paulus 4. Pius 4. Pius 5. Gregory 13. Sixtus 5. Vrbanus 7. Gregory 14. Innocentius 9. Clemens 8. FINIS
statua foeminae sede stercoraria iactitant God speed them wel or let them be packing or let them perish and fare ill who bragge of their olde wiues tales and of the sitting stoole and of the Image of the image of the woman which they say is yet to bee seene Read the 6. booke of Laurentius valla his eliganties c. 30 Lactāt de ira dei c. 8. for the vse of the wordvaleo Ter. in Andria act 4. scen 2. Saund de vis monar l. 7. fol. 412. and so indeed valeant qui inter nos dissidium volunt as the younge man in the Poet to which perhaps Genebrard alluded saie I. God speede them well that woulde set diuorce betweene the truth and vs in this case I will leaue Genebrard and come to Saunders who nothinge so shamlesse as the other but of a farre more ingenious and yeelding nature in this point doth confesse that shee is placed as Pope by some next after Leo the fourth Quodita sievenisset which if it had so happened yet because it was an error of fact not of right which happeneth in the most wisest that accident will bring no preiudice to the sea of Rome But all thinges should be so reakoned as if that whole two yeares wherein shee sat the seat had bin voide In deed wee neede not care for any good they do Nothinge will preiudice the sea of Rome whether the sea be empty or ful it is al one they be but painted sepulchres and as dumbe Idols not so good as old servitors who take their pēsions leaue waiting for they did once good in their liues before their service decaied and the Popes spende their time before they come how to get it and after they haue it how to keepe it Alane Cope another of that brood though fully impudent in other cases yet is hee ashamed to deny the story absolutely Alanus Cope dial 1. pag. 47. but maketh a metamorphosed or changeable excuse which no man I trow can either disproue or proue I speake only in ●korne of his so base deuise which is that she might be first a man and after some time in the seate changed to be a woman The change is no more vnlikely thā that such persons after such change should beare childrē vnheard of both which be vnpossible to al men once to thinke of saving to those servants who are sworne to defend such mistresses as dame Ione was And thus hath he overthrowne the fable of Ioan. 8. Lact. instit l. 1. c. 21. fine Quis haec ludibria non rideat qui habeat aliquid sanitatis cū videat homines velut mente captos ea serio facere quae si quis faciat in lusis nimis loscivus ineptus esse videatur Who woulde not laugh saith Lactantius at these trifles that hath any sparke of wit when he shal see men doing those things in earnest as if they were bereaved of their wits whereas if any man should but do thē in sport or iest he would be thought over wanton and lascivious But to put the matter out of doubt where Genebrard and some other with him do make themselues sport as before is said with the word Anglicus and Moguntinus referring them to the country as though it should bee in doubt whether shee were an English woman or a Moguntine it is plaine to any man not preiudiced in opinion Fascicu temp anno 864. Her name was Ioan English Fasciculus temporum their owne historian saith Iste Ioannes Anglicus cognomine sed natione Maguntinus This Ione English by birth of Magunce in Germanie is said to be about these times was a woman disguised in mans apparell shee had so profited in the holy scripture that her like was scarse to be found and was chosen to be Pope But after being great with childe as shee went in procession shee fell in labour and died Sabelli Aene. 9. l. 1. pag. 469 aut aliter 625 aut aliter 325. shee was plagued of God for it saith he nor is shee put in the number of the Popes Sabellicus an other historiographer of their own ancienter thā the last recited maketh mention of this Dame Lone Nullus defunctae honor habitus There was no honour bestowed at her burial the report is for the remēbrance of her filthie act saith he They that desire further testimony herin Let them read Bishop Iuell in the defence of the Apology of the church of England part 4. c. 1. diu 1. fol. 380. B. Iuell And Willet in his Synopsis Papismi contro 14. quaest 10. fol. 218. Andr Willet Presently after Pope Jone followed that vnhappy time in the sea of Rome so much lamented in so much that Wernerus in Fasciculo temporum crieth out Heu heu domine Deus quomodo obscuratum est aurum mutatus est color optimus Foscicu temp fol. 68. a dom 884. 904. quâlia contigisse circa haec tempora etiam in sancta sede apostolica quam vsque huc tanto zelo custodisti legimus scandala Oh Lord God saith he how is thy gold made darke and vnknowē Looke what happened in these times to the sea of Rōe The best color is changed what reproches doe we read of that happened in these times even to the sea Apostolike which hetherto thou hast kept with so great watchfulnesse what contentions strifes sects envies ambitions intrusions and persecutions hath there bin O the very worst time wherin holynesse is wanting faithfulnes is fled from the sonns of men Thē was there a monster with a doggs head A mōster presented to the Emperour and members like a mā presented to the Emperour And well might it saith he shew the deformity of that time when as men wandred here and there without an head Chron. l. 4. fol 794. anno 885 as doggs run a bout barking Genebrard confesseth that some historians following Sigebert in his Chronicles after Martin 2. of some called Marinus who got the Popedome by ill meanes place one Agapetus who was Pope one yeare likwise betweene Adrian 3. who by ordinary account followed the saide Martin and Stephan 6. or 5. who succeeded Adrian they place one Basill who as they say sat 4. yeares But we saith he follow Platina For. 150 yeers to gether to the number of 50. popes they al revolted frō the faith a great part of writers This is that time or neere about wherin he also cōfesseth that for 150. yeeres together to the number of about 50. Popes from Iohn 8. to Leo 9. they were alout of order and rather Apostatates then Apostilicke Amongst which infamous Popes were these especially playing their parts as it were on a stage Martin 2. Stephan Formosus Iohn 9. Sergius 3. Iohn 12. Sylvester 2. A breife of their dealinges is this Bell de Rom. pont l. 4 c. 12. Formosus being a Cardinal and a bishop was deposed and degraded by