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A62991 Historical collections, out of several grave Protestant historians concerning the changes of religion, and the strange confusions following in the reigns of King Henry the Eighth, Edward the Sixth, Queen Mary and Elizabeth : with an addition of several remarkable passages taken out of Sir Will. Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire, relating to the abbies and their institution. Touchet, Anselm, d. 1689?; Hickes, George, 1642-1715.; Dugdale, William, Sir, 1605-1686. 1686 (1686) Wing T1955; ESTC R4226 184,408 440

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Out of this Church neither the Title of Christian secures any one neither doth Baptism confer Salvation neither doth any man offer a Sacrifice agreeable to God neither doth any man attain to Eternal Life For there is one only Church one only Dove one only Well-Beloved one only Spouse And again in his Book De Fide ad Petrum cap. 39. Hold this saith he most firmly and doubt not of it in any wise That every Heretick and Schismatick whatsoever Baptized in the Name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost if before the end of his Life he be not Reunited to the Catholick Church let him bestow never so many Alms yea though he should shed his Blood for the Name of Christ he cannot obtain Salvation Likewise St. Prosper says Lib. de Prom. Praedestinat Dei p. 4. cap. 5. He who does not Communicate with the Universal Church is an Heretick and Antichrist See Athanasius in the beginning of his Creed Whosoever expects to be saved must necessarily before all things Assent to and retain the Catholick Faith which unless he preserves intire and inviolate that is entirely submits to it without all question he will perish everlastingly And again at the end thereof thus This is the Catholick Faith which except a Man believe Faithfully he cannot be saved See St. Augustin writing upon this Beatitude Blessed are those that suffer Persecution for Justice Lib. 1. de Sermone Domini in Monte. It is not the suffering these Things saith he that makes men Blessed but the undergoing them for the Name of Christ not only with an equal mind but likewise with joy and much satisfaction For many Hereticks deceiving Souls under the name of Christians have suffered many of these things But they are therefore excluded from this reward of being Blessed because it is not here only said Blessed are those which suffer Persecution but it i●… further added for Justice Now where Faith is not sound and entire there can be no perfect Justice since the Just man lives by Faith Neither can Schismaticks promise to themselves any thing of this reward because likewise where there is no Charity there can be no Justice For the love of our Neighbor cannot design any thing that is evil or unjust against him Hence it is manifest that if they had such Charity they would not seek to rent and tear in pieces the Body of Christ which is his Church Likewise the same Father in his Fourteenth Sermon De verbis Domini proves in general against all Hereticks and Schismaticks That whatsoever in particular their opinions are yet since they profess otherwise than the Church does and requires of them to do they are in a damnable Estate because thereby they virtually renounce one Fundamental Article of Faith viz. of the Authority and Unity of the Catholick Church And therefore if they break Communion though but for one Doctrin and that of it self of no great importance their Orthodoxness in all other Points will not avail them wanting Truth and especially renouncing Charity and Obedience to the Universal Church Hereupon the same Father in Psal. 54. saith of the Donatists We have each of us one Baptism in This they were with me We celebrated the Feasts of the Martyrs in This they were with me We frequented the Solemnity of Easter in This they were with me But they were not in All Things with me In Schism they were not with me In Heresie they were not with me In many Things they were with me and in some few Things they were not with me But in those few Things in which they were not with me those many Things do not profit them in which they were with me So again the same Father speaking to the same Donatists Epist. 48. saith You are with us in Baptism in the Creed and in other Sacraments of the Lord But in the spirit of Unity in the bond of Peace and finally in the Catholick Church you are not with us To the same purpose writeth St. Cyprian in his Book De Unitate Ecclesiae One Church saith he the Holy Ghost in the Person of our Lord designeth and saith One is my Dove This Unity of the Church he that holdeth not doth he think that he holdeth the Faith He that withstandeth and resisteth the Church He that forsaketh Peters Chair upon which the Church was built doth he trust that he is in the Church When the Blessed Apostle St. Paul also sheweth this Sacrament of Unity saying One Body and one Spirit Ephes. 4. 4. Which Unity we Bishops especially that Rule in the Church ought to hold fast and maintain that we may prove the Bishoply Function also it self to be one and undivided And again in one of his Epistles Epist. 40. There is one God and one Christ and one Church and one Chair by our Lord's Voice founded upon Peter Another Altar to be set up or a new Priesthood to be made besides one Altar and one Priesthood is impossible Whosoever gathereth elsewhere scattereth It is adulterous it is impious it is sacrilegious whatsoever is instituted by mans Fury to the breach of God's Divine Disposition Get ye far from the contagion of such men and fly from their speeches as from a canker and pestilence Our Lord having premonished and warned us beforehand saying they are Blind leaders of the Blind Matt. 15. 14. St. Hilary likewise Libro ad Constant. August thus applieth this same place of the Apostle Ephes. 4. 4 5. against the Arians as we may do against the Calvinists Perillous and miserable it is saith he that there are now so many Faiths as Wills and so many Doctrins as manners whiles either Faiths are so written as we will or as we will so are understood And whereas according to one God and one Lord and one Baptism there is also one Faith we fall away from that which is the only Faith and whiles more Faiths be made they begin to come to that that there is none at all Noah's Ark is an acknowledged Type of the Church as it appears by St. Peter 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. Wherefore as All perished Temporally by the Deluge that were not in the Ark so all perished Eternally who are out of the Church Witness St. Cyprian whose words are these Cyprian lib de Unitat. Ecclesiae Whosoever separates himself from the Church is separated from the Promises of Christ. Whosoever forsakes the Church is an Alien an Enemy a prophane Person He cannot have God for his Father who will not have the Church for his Mother Could any escape drowning being out of the Ark So neither shall any one escape Damnation out of the Church They cannot abide with God who refuse to continue with one accord in his Church Though they be cast into the Fire and burnt though they be devoured by wild Beasts c. yet shall not that be any Crown of their Faith but a punishment of their perfidiousness Such an one may be killed he shall
Principality coins or else follows new Opinions St. Augustin likewise notes in the latter end of his Book De Haeresibus That the People need not to be curious to know what Opinions Hereticks hold much less to labour to confute them It being enough for them to know that they are condemned And St. Cyprian Epist. 52. Num. 7. sayes notably to Antonianus demanding curiously what Heresies Novatian taught No matter saith he what Heresies he holds or preaches when he teaches without That is to say out of the Church Now although Hereticks be often incorrigible yet the Church of God ceases not by all means possible to revoke them Therefore St. Augustin says Epist. 162. The Heretick himself though swelling with odious and detestable pride and mad with the frowardness of wicked Contention as we admonish that he be avoided lest he deceive such as are weak and little ones so we refuse not by all means possible to seek his amendment and reformation Now to understand the Reason why the Apostle here says That an Heretick is condemned by his own judgment we are to know That some other grievous offenders are separated by Excommunication from the Communion of Saints and the Fellowship of God's Church by the Sentence of their Superiours in the same Church But Hereticks more miserable and unfortunate than they run out of the Church of their own accord and so give Sentence against their own Souls to damnation Now further to shew the Reason why Heresie which seeks to divide and tear in pieces the body of the Church is so horrid a crime St. Paul here describes its Unity saying 1 Cor. 12. 12. For as the Body is one and hath many Members and all the Members of the Body whereas they be many yet are One Body So also Christ. For in one Spirit we were all baptized into one Body And vers 23. God hath tempered the Body giving to it that wanted the more abundant honor that there might be no Schism in the Body but the Members together might be careful one for another And a little after You are the Body of Christ and Members of Member Now to prevent the making a Schism in this Body he says 1 Cor. 1 10. I beseech you Brethren by the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ that you All say one Thing and that there be no Schisms among you but that you be perfect in one Sense and in one Knowledge Again Eph. 4. 1. I beseech you that you walk worthy of the Vocation in which you are called And a little after Careful to keep the Unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace One Body and One Spirit as you are called in one Hope of your Vocation One Lord One Faith One Baptism One God and Father of All. And now to manifest what care our Saviour had taken to preserve this Unity of the Church he further adds vers 11. And he gave some Apostles and some Prophets and other some Evangelists and other-some Pastors and Doctors to the Consummation of the Saints unto the Work of Ministry unto the Edifying or building up of the Body of Christ to wit his Church until we meet all into the Unity of Faith and Knowledge of the Son of God into a perfect Man into the measure of the Age of the Fulness of Christ That now we be not Children wavering and carried about with every wind of Doctrin in the wickedness of Men in craftiness to the circumvention of Error But doing the truth in charity let us in all things grow in him who is the Head Christ Of whom the whole Body to wit the Church being compact and knit together by all juncture of Subministration according to the Operation in the measure of every Member maketh the encrease of the Body unto the edifying of it self in charity Thus the Apostle fully delivers the admirable Structure of the Church Annotations Now as Rebellion is the bane of Civil Common-wealths and Kingdoms and Peace and Concord the preservation of the same so is Schism Division and diversity of Faith the Calamity of the Church and Peace Unity and Uniformity the special Blessing of God therein And in the Church above all Common-wealths Because it is in all points a Monarchy tending every way to Unity There being but One God One Christ One Church One Hope One Faith One Baptism One Head One Body as the Apostle here assures us Thus the Apostle of the United Body of the Church Now to manifest the great Dignity of the Church and how much she is beloved by our Saviour St. Paul Ephes. 5 22. says The Man is the Head of the Woman as Christ is the Head of the Church Himself the Saviour of his Body to wit the same Church and of no other And a little after vers 25. Husbands saith he love your Wives as Christ also loved the Church and delivered himself for it that he might Sanctifie it cleansing it by the laver of Water in the Word that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it may be holy and unspotted And again a little after vers 29. No man ever hated his own flesh but he nourisheth and cherisheth it as also Christ the Church Because we be the Members of his Body of his Flesh and of his Bones Annotations The Apostle here saying that Christ is the Saviour of his Body to wit his Church doth evidently declare That none can be saved or have any benefit by Christ that is not of his Body the Church And what Church that is St. Augustin expresseth in these words The Catholick Church only is the Body of Christ whereof he is the Head Out of this Body of the Church the Holy Ghost quickeneth no man And a little after He that will have the Spirit let him beware he remain not out of the Church Let him beware he enter not into it feignedly August Epist. 50. ad Bonifacium Comitem in fine It is an unspeakable Dignity of the Church which the Apostle expresseth often elsewhere but more especially in this whole passage to be that Creature for which Christ effectually Suffered to be washed and embrued with Water and Blood issuing out of his holy side to be nourished with his own Body to be his Members to be so joyned unto him as the Body and Members of the same Flesh Bone and Substance to the Head to be loved and cherished of him as a Wife of a Husband yea to be his Wife and most dear Spouse taken and formed as St. Augustin often says out of his own Side upon the Cross as Eve our First-Father Adam's Spouse was made of his Rib. August in Psalm 126 127. In respect of which great Dignity and Excellency the same holy Father affirms the Church to be the principal Creature of God and therefore named in the Creed next after the Holy Ghost And he proves against the Macedonians the Holy Ghost to be God because
he is named before the Church in the Confession of our Faith Of which incomparable Excellency of the Church so beloved of Christ and so inseparably joyned in Marriage with him if the Hereticks of our time had any sense or consideration they would neither think their contemptible Company or Congregation to be the glorious Spouse of our Lord nor teach that the Church may Err that is to say may be divorced from her Spouse for Idolatry Superstition Heresie or other Abominations For this is as much as to say That this his Wife so dear and so praised here is in truth become a very Whore By this it evidently appears how just it is that all Hereticks should be Excluded from all hope of Salvation they being so injurious to Christ in thus reviling the Church his Spouse and accusing her of such horrid crimes It would require a large Volume to treat of all the passages of Scripture which speak of this Sacred Authority of our Mother the Church and the certain Damnation incurred by all such as refuse to hear and obey her to manifest which I conceive what has been here already said may suffice as also to confute that horrid false Opinion generally held in this Nation to the Destruction of many Souls to wit That all the multiplicity of Sects in this Nation may yet be capable of Salvation if they lead a Moral good Life which how untrue it is these following Testimonies of the Fathers conformable to the Testimonies of the Holy Scriptures will make it evidently appear CHAP. III. Testimonies of the Fathers shewing their Affection and Zeal to Catholick Unity and their detestation of Schisms and Divisions SAint Augustin says of the Donatists Epist. 48 That they conceived it a thing indifferent unto what Party they joyned themselves supposing that they were Christians and therefore they remained fixed to that Party in which they were born Now unto these St. Augustin and the rest of the Provincial Council at Cirta in Nu●…idia sent this following Declaration Aug. Epist. 152. Whosoever is separated from this Catholick Church amongst whom they reckoned the Sect of the Donatists how laudably soever he may think himself to live shall be excluded from Eternal Life and remain obnoxious to God's heavy Wrath as being guilty of the heinous crime of being divided from the Unity of Christ And as for the Sacraments received by them in that Separation the Declaration goes on thus You being fixed in the Sacriledge of Schism partake of the Sacraments of Christ to your own judgment or condemation Which Sacraments were profitable and very advantageous to you when in Catholick peace you had Christ for your Head where Charity covered a multitude of sins Again St. Augustin says of them De Bapt. lib. 1. chap. 8. Those whom the Donatists heal of the Wound of Idolatry and Infidelity they themselves wound more dangerously with the wound of Schism And again Super Gest. Emerit Out of the Catholick Church an Heretick may have all things but Salvation He may have the Sacraments He may sing Hallelujah He may answer Amen He may keep the Gospel He may have the Faith and Preach it only Salvation he cannot have Likewise in his Book against Petilian lib. 3. cap. 5. he saith No Man preaching the Name of Christ and carrying or ministring the Sacraments of Christ is to be followed against the Unity of Christ. And again writing against the Adversary of the Law and the Prophets lib. 1. cap. 17. he hath these words If he hear not the Church let him be to thee as an Heathen or Publican which is more grievous than if he was strucken through with a Sword consumed by Flames exposed to wild Beasts c. And again August de Symb. ad Catech. lib. 4. cap. 10. For this cause says St. Austin our Christian Creed concludes with the Articles touching the Church because if any one be found separated from her he shall be excluded out of the number of God's Children neither shall he have God for his Father who will not have his Church for his Mother It will nothing profit such an one that he hath been Orthodox or sound in his Belief done so many Good Woorks c. Lastly In another place Lib. de Past. cap. 12. he saith The Devil saith not Let them be Donatists and not Arians for whether they be here or there they belong to him that grathers without making a difference Let him adore Idols saith the Devil he is mine Let him remain in the Superstition of the Jews he is mine Let him quit Unity and pass over to this or that or any Heresie he is mine So likewise the Ancient Father St. Irenaeus lib. 4. cap. 62. God saith he will judge those which make Schisms in the Church Ambitious men who have not the honor of God before their eyes but rather embracing their own interest than the Unity of the Church for small and light causes divide the great and glorious Body of Christ. In like manner St. Dionysius Bishop of Alexandria Hist. lib. 6. cap. 45. as Eusebius witnesseth writing to Novatian saith A Man ought rather to endure All Things than to consent to the Division of the Church of God since Martyrdom to which Men expose themselves to hinder the dismembring of the Church is no less glorious than what a Man suffers for refusing to sacrifice to Idols Also St. Cyprian Lib. de Unitat. Ecles in his Book of the Unity of the Church Do they think saith he that Christ is amongst them when they are Assembled I speak of those which make Assemblies out of the Church of Christ. No although they were drawn to Torments and Execution for the Confession of the Name of Christ yet this pollution is not washed away No not with their Blood This inexplicable and inexcusable crime of Schism is not purged away even by death it self That Man cannot be a Martyr that is not in the Church And again he saith He shall not have God for his Father that would not have the Church for his Mother So likewise St. Pacianus in one of his Epistles Epist. 2. ad Sempr. Although that Novatian saith he hath been put to death for Christ yet he has not received a Crown And why Because he was separated from the peace of the Church from concord from that Mother of whom whosever will be a Martyr must be a portion St. Chrysostom in one of his Homilies Hom. 11. in Ephes. tells us There is nothing doth so sharply provoke the wrath of God as the Division of the Church insomuch as though we should have performed all other sorts of Good Things yet we shall incur a punishment no less cruel by dividing the Unity and Fulness of the Church than those have done who pierced and divided Christ's own Body And therefore the Fourth Council of Carthage declares Can. 1. That out of the Catholick Church there is no Salvation St. Fulgentius likewise saith De Remiss Peccat cap. 22.
Historical COLLECTIONS Out of several Grave Protestant Historians Concerning the CHANGES OF RELIGION AND The strange Confusions following In the Reigns of KING HENRY the Eighth EDWARD the Sixth QUEEN MARY and ELIZABETH With an Addition of several Remarkable Passages taken out of Sir Will. Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire relating to the Abbies and their Institution Published with Allowance LONDON Printed by Henry Hills Printer to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty for His Houshold and Chappel And for him and Mat●… Tur●…er at the Lamb in High holbourn 1686. THE PREFACE HAving perused several of our Histories of England and standing amazed to find in them That the Alteration of Religion here hath been totally carried on by worldly Interest I thought it would not be ungrateful to the Reader to have those various Passages concerning the Changes of Religion collected together out of those Histories for the informing him exactly how those Changes have been made And withal of the Beginning and Progress of Presbytery in this Nation and the Ground of Multiplying other Sects which hath been the cause of all our late Confusions I have laboured to connect these Passages together in as good an order as I think could be expected in matters ●…ulled out of such large volumns Much more might have been Collected concerning these matters out of diverse other Histories But I think the chief matters are here sufficiently handled which may satisfie the curiosity of any indifferent Reader To add more Authority to what shall be here taken out of Dr. Heylyns History of Reformation from whence the chiefest matters of these Collections are gathered I will here Insert a Passage out of the Preface of it by which it will appear what diligence he hath used in composing this History The words of the Preface are these IN this following History you will find more to satisfie your curiosity and inform your judgment then can be possibly drawn up in this general view As for my performance in this work In the first place I am to tell you that towards the raising of this Fabrick I have not borrowed my materials only out of vulgar Authors but searched into the Records of the Convocation consulted all such Acts of Parliament as concerned my purpose advised with many Forein Writers of great name and credit exemplified some Records and Charters of no common quality many rare pieces in the Cottonian Library and not a few Debates and Orders of the Council-Table which I have laid together in as good a form and beautified it with a trimming as agreeable as my hands could give it Thus Dr. Heylyn A Preamble to the following Collections concerning the great Kindness and good Correspondence between King Henry the Eighth and some Popes FIrst King Henry the Eighth for writing a Book against Luther received a Bull from the Pope whereby he had the Title given him to be Defender of the Faith for him and his Successors for ever The Relation concerning which Book and the Reception of it by the Pope is thus set down in the History of the Lord Herbert of Cherbury pag. 104. OUr King being at leisure now from Wars and delighting much in learning thought he could not give better proof either of his Zeal or Education then to write against Luther To this also he was exasperated That Luther had oftentimes spoken contemptuously of the learned Thomas of A●…uin who yet was in so much requst with the King that he was therefore called Thomistious Hereupon the King compiles a Book wherein he strenuously opposed Luther in the point of Indulgences Number of Sacraments the Papal Authority and other particulars to be seen in that his work Entitled de Septem Sacramentis c. a principal Copy whereof richly bound being sent to Leo I remember my self to have seen in the Vatican Library The manner of the delivery whereof as I find it in our Records was thus Doctor John Clark Dean of Windsor our Kings Embassador appearing in full Consistory the Pope knowing the glorious Present he brought first gave him his cheek to kiss and then receiving the Book promised to do so much for the Approbation thereof as ever was done for St. Augustine or St. Hierome's Works Assuring him withal that the next Consistory he would bestow a publick Title on our King which having been heretofore privately debated among the Cardinals those of Protector Defensor Romanae Ecclesiae or Sedis Apostolicae or Rex Apostolicus or Orthodoxus produced they at last agreed on Defensor Fidei a Transcript of which Bull out of an Original sub plumbo in our Records I have here inserted Leo Bishop Servant of the Servants of God to his most dear Son Henry King of England Defender of the Faith All health and happiness God having called Us although infinitely unworthy of it to the Government of the whole Church We bend all Our thoughts to promote the Catholick Faith without which none can be saved and labour by all means as belongs to Our duty to make use of and promote all such helps as have been wisely ordained for the preserving the integrity of Christian Faith amongst all but most especially amongst Princes and to suppress the endeavours of those who labour to corrupt it by lies and false Doctrines And as other Bishops of Rome our Predecessors have been accustomed to confer special favours upon Catholick Princes according to the exigency of Times and Affairs Especially upon such as have not only remained unmovable in their Obedience to the Holy Roman Catholick Church with an entire Faith and servent Devotion in the tempestuous times and raging perfidious fury of Schismaticks and Hereticks But likewise as legitimate Children and stout Champions of the same Church have opposed themselves both temporally and spiritually against the mad fury of such Schismaticks and Hereticks as have opposed it So we also desire to extol your Majesty with condign and immortal Praises for your excellent and immortal works and actions in favour of Us and this Holy See where by Gods permission we are established and to grant you those things which may enable and engage you to have a care to preserve our Lords Flock from Wolves and to cut off with the material Sword rotten members that seek to infect the mystical Body of Christ confirming in the solidity of Faith the Hearts of such as waver or are in danger of falling When our beloved Son John Clark your Majesties Orator or Embassador deliver'd unto Us in Our Consistory before Our Venerable Brethren Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church and many other Prelates of the Roman Court a Book which your Majesty hath composed out of your great Charity and Zeal of Catholick Faith enflamed with a fervour of Devotion towards Us and this Holy See as a Noble and proper Antidote against the errors of divers Hereticks often condemned by this Holy See and lately raised up again by Martin Luther he then likewise further declared unto Us your Majesties desire that this
in the Truth so the Devil is ready to seduce us And I have been seduced But bear me witness That I die in the Catholick Faith of the holy Church And I desire you to pray for me that so long as life remains in this Flesh I waver nothing in my Faith Having said this he was presently beheaded Thus Howes This following Relation although it concerns not the shedding of Blood yet is very remarkable as manifesting how the King's Marriage with the Lady Anne of Cleve was in Parliament declared not lawful Which is thus related by Howes upon Stow Page 578. AFter the Death of the Lady Jane Seymour the King 's Third Wife He Married the Lady Anne of Cleve in the Two and thirtieth year of his Reign From which time the King not only continued his first Misliking of her but his hatred encreased more and more against her not only for want of beauty whereof at first he took exceptions but also for sundry other qualities whereof he secretly accused her As also he said that her body was unpleasant making great doubt that she was no Virgin when she came into England with divers other defects which he said he knew by her outward appearance to be in her And being thus so sore perplexed and desperate of redress he grew wondrous apt and willing to call in question any thing that might tend to the dissolving of this Marriage Within Eight dayes the King told his Physicians his further cause of grief That she was loathsome to him in Bed and that her Body was foul and out of order The King being thus tormented in Body and Mind knew not how to ease himself until he had procured a speedy Divorce Which was thus effected Certain Lords came down into the Lower-House of Parliament expresly declaring the causes why this Marriage was not Lawful And in conclusion the matter was by the Convocation clearly determined that the King might lawfully marry where he would and so might she It appears clearly in the Record what moved the King to this Marriage For these are his words I declare that when the first Communication was had with me about this Marriage I was glad to hearken to it trusting to have some assured Friend by it I much doubting at that time both the Emperor France and the Bishop of Rome Thus Stow. The King 's Fifth Wife Catherine Howard put to death for Adultery As appears by this Relation Baker page 514. THe King was informed of the Queens dissolute life first before her Marriage with one Francis Dereham and since her Marriage with one Thomas Culpepper of the King's Bed-Chamber Whereupon Sir Tho. Wrioths●…ey was sent to the Queen at Hampton-Court to charge her with these Crimes and discharging her Houshold to cause her to be conveighed to Syon The Delinquents being examined Dereham confessed that before the King's Marriage with the Lady Catherine there had been a pre-contract between him and her But when once he understood of the King 's good liking to her he then waved it and concealed it for her preferment These Gentlemen were arraigned and had Judgment to die as in cases of Treason They were drawn from the Tower to Tyburn Where Culpepper was beheaded and Dereham hanged and dismember'd The Lord William Howard and the Lady Margaret his Wife Catherine Tilney and Alice Bestwold Gentlewomen Joan Bulmer Anne Howard Wife to Henry Noward the Queens Brother with divers others were all condemned for Misprision of Treason in concealing the Queens misdemeanour and adjudged to forfeit all their Lands and Goods during life and to remain in perpetual Prison The Lords and Commons in Parliament Petitioned the King That he would not vex himself with the Queens Offences and that both she and the Lady Rochford might be Attainted by Parliament And that to avoid protracting of time he would give his Royal Assent to it under the Great Seal without staying for the end of the Parliament Also that Dereham and Culpepper having been Attainted before by the Common-Law might be Attainted likewise by Parliament All which was Assented unto by the King After this the Queen and the Lady Rochford were beheaded on the Green within the Tower It is certainly said that after her Condemnation She protested to Dr. White Bishop of Winchester her last Confessor That as for the Act for which She was condemn'd She took God and his holy Angels to witness upon her Souls Salvation that She died guiltless Thus of the putting to death of his Wives Here follows an unheard of Cruelty of Bloodshed for Religion in these times of Confusion and Change of Religion ONe Lambert was accused for denying the real presence in the Sacrament who Appeal'd to the King and the King was content to hear him Whereupon a Throne was set up in the Hall of the King's Palace at Westminster for the King to sit And when the Bishops had urged their Arguments and could not prevail then the King took him in hand hoping perhaps to have the Honor of converting an Heretick when the Bishops could not do it and withal promised him pardon if he would recant But all would not do for he remained obstinate the King miss'd his Honor and the Delinquent his Pardon Being shortly after drawn to Smithfield and burnt Baker page 412. Two more were for the same cause burnt Baker in the same page Dr. John Fisher Bishop of Rochester and Sir Thomas Moor expresly denyed at Lambeth before the Archbishop of Canterbury to take the Oath of Supremacy and thereupon were both beheaded Bishop Fisher was much lamented as being reputed a man both learned and wise and of good life Sir Thomas Moor was both learned and very wise His Devotion was such that he used to wear a Shirt of Hair-cloth next his skin for a perpetual Penance And oftentimes in the Church he would put on a Surplice and help the Priest at Mass Which he did not forbear to do when he was Lord Chancellor of England as one time the Duke of Norfolk coming to the Church found him doing it Baker page 406. Sir William Peterson Priest late Commissary of Calais and Sir William Richardson Priest of St. Maries in Calais were both there drawn hang'd and quarter'd in the Market-place for the Supremacy Stow page 579. Dr. Wilson and Dr. Samson Bishop of Chichester were sent to the Tower for relieving certain Prisoners who had denyed to Subscribe to the King's Supremacy And for the same offence Richard Farmer Grocer of London a rich and wealthy Citizen was committed to the Marshalsea and after arraigned and attainted in a Praemunire and lost all his Goods his Wife and Children thrust out of doors Stow page 580. Robert Barns Dr. of Divinity Thomas Gerrard Parson of Honey-lane and William Jerom Vicar of Stepney-Heath Bachelors in Divinity Also Edward Powel Thomas Able and Richard Fetherston all Three Doctors were drawn from the Tower of London to West Smithfield The Three First were drawn to a Stake and there
Father Who looked upon it as an Argument of God's displeasure as being much offended at this Second Marriage He then began to think of His ill Fortune with both His Wives both Marriages subject to cispute and the Legitimation of both His Daughters likely to be called in question in the time succeeding He must therefore cast about for another Wife of whose Marriage and his Issue by Her there could rise no controversie His eye had carried him to a Gentlewoman in the Queens Attendance on the enjoying of whom he so fixed his Thoughts that he had quite obliterated all remembrance of his former Loves Whereupon He began to be as weary of Queen Annes Gayeties and Secular humor as formerly of the Gravity and Reservedness of Queen Katharine And causing many eyes to observe her Actions they brought him a Return of some particulars which he conceived might give him a sufficient ground to proceed upon The Lord Rochfort her own Brother having some Suit to obtain by her means of the King was found whispering to her on her Bed when she was in it which was interpreted for an act of some dishonor done or intended to be done to the King in the aggravating whereof with all odious circumstances none was more forward than the Lady Rochfort her self It was observed also That Sir Henry Norris Groom of the Stool to the King had entertained a very dear affection for her not without giving himself hopes of succeeding in the King's Bed if she chanced to survive Him And it appeared that she had given him opportunity to make his Affection known and to acquaint her with his hopes which she expressed by twitting him in a frolick humor with looking after dead mens shoes Weston and Breerton both Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber were observed also to be very diligent in their Services and Addresses to her which were construed more to proceed from Love than Duty Out of all these Premises the King resolved to come to a conclusion of His aims and wishes A Solemn Tilting was maintained at Greenwich at which both the King and Queen were present the Lord Rochfort and Sir Henry Norris being principal Challengers Here the Queen by chance let fall her Handkerchief which was taken up by one of her supposed Favourites who stood under the Window whom the King perceived to wipe his face with it This taken by the King to have been done of purpose he thereupon leaves the Queen and all the rest and goes immediatly to Westminster Rochfort and Norris are the next day committed to the Tower and the Queen likewise After which Breerton and Weston with Mark Smeton one of the King's Musicians were commited on the same occasion These persons being thus committed and the cause made known the next care was to find sufficient evidence for their condemnation It was objected That the Queen growing out of hope of having any issue Male by the King had used the company of the Lord Rochfort Norris Breerton Weston and Smeton involving her at once in no smaller crimes than Adultery and Incest It appears by a Letter of Sir William Kingston Lieutenant of the Tower that he had much communication with her when she was his Prisoner in which her language seemed to be broken and distressed betwixt tears and laughter She exclaimed against Norris as if he had accused her It was further signified in that Letter that she named some others who had obsequiously applyed themselves to her Love and Service acknowledging such passages as shewed she had made use of very great liberties The conclusion of this Business was That both the Queen and the rest of the Prisoners were all put to death So died this great Lady one of the most remarkable Mockeries and Disports of Fortune which these last ages have produced raised from the quality of a private Lady to the Bed of a King Crowned on the Throne and Executed on the Scaffold the Fabrick of her Power and Glory being Six years in Building but cast down in an instant The splendor and magnificence of her Coronation seeming to have no other end but to make her the more glorious Sacrifice at the next Alteration But her death was not the chief mark the King aim'd at If she had only lost her Head though with the loss of her Honor it would have been no Bar to her Daughter Elizabeth from Succeeding her Father in the Throne Now he must have his Bed free from all such pretensions the better to draw on the following Marriage It was therefore thought necessary that she should be separated from his Bed by some other means than the Ax or Sword and that He should be legally separated from her in a Court of Judicature when the Sentence of Death had deprived Her of all means as well as of all manner of desire to dispute the point It doth not appear in Record upon what ground this Marriage was dissolved All which occurs in reference to it is a Solemn Instrument under the Seal of the Archbishop Cranmer by which that Marriage is declared on good and valid Reasons to be null and void Which Sentence was pronounced at Lambeth in the Presence of most of the great Men of that time and approved by the Prelates and Clergy assembled in their Convocation and lastly confirmed by Act of Parliament In which Act there also passed a Clause which declared the Lady Elizabeth to be Illegitimate Thus far Dr. Heylyn concerning her Mother Now because the Relation here made concerning this Queen belongs to the Reign of King Henry the Eighth I think it will not be altogether improper to insert a Speech made in that Kings Reign which did not come to my hands time enough to be put into its proper place A Speech made in the Upper House of Parliment by Dr. John Fisher Bishop of Rochester in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth in opposition to the Suppressing of the lesser Monasteries My Honored Lords THis is the place where your glorious and noble Progenitors have paternized the Kingdom from oppression Here is the Sanctuary where in all Ages but this of ours our Mother Church found still a sound Protection I should be infinitely sorrowful that from you that are so lovely Branches of antiquity and Catholick Honor the Catholick Faith should be so deeply wounded For God's and your own Goodness sake leave not to Posterity so great a blemish that you were the First and only those that give it up to ruine Where there is Cause you nobly punish and with Justice but beware of infringing so long continued Priviledges or denying the Members of the Church the parts of their Advantage that is enjoyed by every private Subject The Commons shoot their Arrows at our Livings which are the Motives that conceit us or make us to be conceived guilty Is all the Kingdom innocent and we only faulty that there is no room left for other Considerations far more weighty The Diligence Devotion and Liberality of
your Great Forefathers endowed their Mother Church with fair and large Revenues making it still their greatest care to keep her upright able still in freedom And will you give consent that like a servile Bondmaid she now sinks lower to a naked thraldom and by degrees be forced from her Mansion If not to what end serves the flux of these Petitions that taint your Ears with Language far unfit the Ears of Christian Princes These strike not at the withered Branches but at the Tree on which Religion groweth Certainly All are not guilty Admit that some as they enforce or urge be vicious must it conclude there is none good amongst us or able to reform their proper vices Will you assume a Power till now unheard of to give away their Rites by new made Statutes If you will seek and sist our Constitutions you shall there find as strict Injunctions as you can make for Reformation But I suppose it is not that is aimed at pretence of Restauration or Reformation tends to ruine else such beginnings could not find such Favor My Lords consider well your actions be advised This Cause seems only Ours it will be Yours if that the Mother Church do feel Injustice Your turns are next to feel the like Oppression When Faith begins to fail then all must perish Heretick or Heretical Fancies taint the common People whom Novelties betray even to Perdition Let Neighbour Nations tell you your own story Husse Luther and such frantick Teachers cry out against the Church in all their Sermons they do pretend nothing else but Reformation when they themselves are deepest dyed in mischief What follows them to wit Perdition we may expect in Justice The Churches Wealth occasioned this first moving If that were poor our Vices would be Vertues and none would be so forward to Accuse us What can we look for then but Desolation where private ends are made a publick grievance Our Lesser Houses are desired from us not that their value doth deserve the Motion but that the Greater may succeed their fortune which soon will follow if the gap be opened The King himself I hope is too too gracious to set abroach an Action so disordered Nor can I think the Lower House of Commons will be so blind to Second this loose Motion Some giddy-brain whose fading Fortunes lead him to hope to raise himself out of our Ruins betrays their Judgments with a shew of Justice which seeks in truth but meerly Innovation which must succeed unless you do oppose it Wherefore My Lords call back that Ancient Vertue that so long time hath sat in these your places Now is the time to shew your worth the Church Implores it the Church which you acknowledge for your Mother If Liberty take place of Faith farewel Religion The Turk may then direct us how to guid in Rapine Blood and Murder Foul Dissention proceeds from want of good Devotion The lack of Faith begets these strange Conceptions which time will make stark dead if we continue Thus of this Speech Now we will proceed to relate what occurs in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth as touching matters of Religion CHAP. I. Of Her Praying for the Dead and being Crowned by a Catholick Bishop Anno Reg. Eliz. I. Howe 's upon Stow pag. 635. THe Princess Elizabeth being Proclaimed Queen caused these Solemn Rites to be performed for Her Sister and Charles the Emperor In the Abbey-Church of Westminster the Corps of Queen Mary was very royally Enterred with all Solemn Funeral Rites and a Mass of Requiem In the same place and in like Princely manner were performed Solemn Obsequies for the late famous Emperor Charles the Fifth Thus Howes Her Coronation She was Crowned according to the Order of the Roman Pontifical by Dr. Owen Oglethorpe Bishop of Carlisle the only Man amongst all the Bishops who could be wrought on by her to perform that Office Whether it were that they saw some Alteration coming to which they were resolved not to yield conformity or for some other reasons is not certainly known The Bishop of Ely had a particular reason for his refusing this because he had been one of those that were sent to Rome to render the Submission of the Kingdom to the Pope still Living and therefore could not now appear with Honor in any such Action as seemed to carry with it a Repugnancy if not a manifest Inconsistency with the same Engagement It cannot be denyed but that there were Three Bishops yet alive of King Edward's making all of them Zealously affected to the Reformation And possibly it may seem stange that the Queen received not the Crown rather from one of their hands than to put her self to the hazard of so many denials as had been given Her by the others But unto this it may be Answered That the said Bishops at that time were deprived of their Sees and therefore not in a capacity to perform that service Besides there being at that time no other Form estalished for a Coronation than that which had much in it of the Ceremonies of the Church of Rome she was not sure that any of the said Three Bishops would have acted in it without such Alterations and Omissions in the whole course of the Order as might have rendred the action questionable amongst captious Men. And therefore finally she thought it more conducible to her Reputation amongst Foreign Princes to be Crowned by the hands of a Catholick Bishop or one at least that was accounted such than if it had been done by any of the other Religion Thus Dr. Heylyn But notwithstanding these Solemnities and the profession of the Catholick Religion in all things not only by Permission but also by Command which sufficiently manifest that there was nothing but Humane Policy in the conduct of this Affair yet a change of Religion was designed as will appear by what shall be here said CHAP. II. Of the Policy used and strange manner of introducing this following Change of Religion and of the Consequence of it to wit a general Confusion in all matters of Religion Dr. Heylyn pag. 103. QUEEN Elizabeth knew full well that Her Legitimation and the Pope's Supremacy could not stand together and that She could not possibly maintain the one without a discarding of the other But in this case it concerned her to walk very warily and not to unmask her self too much at once before she had put her self into a posture of Ability to make good her Actions Notwithstanding upon a serious debate of all particulars she was resolved to proceed to a Reformation as the time should serve In order whereunto She Constitutes her Privy Council which she compounds of such Ingredients as might neither give encouragement to any of those who wished well to the Church of Rome or alienate their Affections from Her whose Hearts were more inclined to the Reformation Now as the Papists in the first beginning of the Reign of Queen Mary hoping thereby to obtain her Favor
Answer that it is a True Church of God where Jesus Christ is truly taught and his Sacraments rightly Administred how can we disburthen our selves of our forsaking and flying from that Church which we do confess and acknowledge to be of God When with that Church which is of God we ought to be One and not to admit of any Separation If you Answer the Church of Rome is not of God but a Malignant Church then it will follow that we the Inhabitants of this Realm have not as yet received any Benefit of Christ seeing we have received no Gospel or other Doctrine nor no other Sacraments but what was sent unto us from the Church of Rome First in King Lucius his days at whose humble Epistle the Holy Martyr Elutherius then Bishop of Rome did send into this Realm two Holy Monks Fugatius and Damianus by whose Doctrine and Preaching we were first brought to the knowledge of the Faith of Jesus Chrrst of his Holy Gospel and his most Holy Sacraments Then Secu●…y 〈◊〉 St. Gregory being Bishop of Rome did sen●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Realm two other Holy Monks St. Austin 〈◊〉 the Apostle of England and Milletus to receive the very self same Faith that had been before planted here in this Realm in the days of King Lucius Thirdly and Last of all Paulus Tertius being Bishop of Rome did send hither the Lord Cardinal Pool his Grace by Birth a Nobleman of this Land his Legate to restore us unto the same Faith which the Martyr St. Eleutherius and St. Gregory had Planted here many years before If therefore the Church of Rome be not of God but a false and Malignant Church then have we been deceived all this while seeing the Gospel the Doctrine Faith and Sacraments must be of the same nature as that Church is from whence it and they came and therefore in relinquishing and forsaking that Church the Inhabitants of this Realm shall be forced to seek further for another Gospel of Christ other Doctrine other Faith and Sacraments than we have hitherto received Which will breed such a Schism and Error in Faith as was never in any Christian Realm And therefore of your Wisdoms worthy of Consideration and maturely to be pondered and be provided for before you pass this Act of Supremacy Thus much touching the First chief Point Now to the Second Deliberation wherein I promised to move your Honors to consider What this Supremacy is which we go about by vertue of this Act to give unto the Queen and wherein it doth consist whether in Spiritual Government or Temporal But if Spiritual as these words in the Act do import Supream Head of the Church of England immediately and next unto God Then it would be considered in what Points this Spiritual Government doth consist and the Points being well known it would be considered Whether this House hath Authority to grant them and her Highness Ability to receive them And as concerning the Points wherein Spiritual Government doth consist I have in reading the Gospel and the whole course of Divinity thereupon as to my Vocation belongeth observed these Four as chief among many others whereof the first is The Power to loose and bind Sins When our Saviour in ordaining Peter to be Chief and Head-Governor of his Church said unto him Tibi dabo Claves Regni Coelorum c. That is To thee will I give the the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven c. Now it would be considered by your Wisdoms whewhether you have sufficient Authority to grant unto her Majesty this first Point of Spiritual Government and to say unto Her Tibi dabimus c. To Thee will we give the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven If you say Yea then do we require the sight of Warrant and Commission by the Virtue of God's Word And if you say No then you may be well assured and perswade your selves that you have not sufficient Authority to make her Highness Supream Head of the Church of Christ here in this Realm The Second Point of Spiritual Government is gathered out of these words of our Saviour Christ spoken to St. Peter in the 20th Chapter of St. John's Gospel Pasce Pasce Pasce That is Feed my Lambs Feed my Lambs Feed my Sheep Now whether your Honors have Authority by this Court of Parliament to say unto our Sovereign Lady Pasce Pasce Pasce c. That is to say Feed you the Flock of Christ you must shew your Warrant and Commission for it And further it is evident that Her Majesty being a Woman by Birth and Nature is not qualified by God's word to feed the Flock of Christ appears most plainly by St. Paul in this wise Taceant Mulieres in Ecclesiis sicut lex dicit Ler Women be silent in the Church for it is not Lawful for them to speak but to be in subjection as the Law saith And it followeth in the same place Turpe est enim Mulieres loqui in Ecclesiâ that is for that it is not seemly for a Woman to speak in the Church And in his second Epistle to Timothy Dominari in virum sed esse silentes that is to say I allow not that a Woman be a Teacher or to be above her Husband but to keep her self in silence Therefore it appears likewise as your Honors have not Authority to give her Highness this second Point of Spiritual Government to Feed the Flock of Christ So by St. Pauls Doctrine her Highness may not intermeddle her self with the same And therefore She cannot be Supream Head of the Church here in England The Third chief Point of Spiritual Government is gathered out of those words of our Saviour Christ spoken to St. Peter in the 22th Chapter of St. Lukes Gospel Ego rogavi pro Te ut non deficiat fides Tua Tu aliquando conversus confirma fratres Tuos That is I Prayed for Thee that thy Faith shall not fail and thou being converted Confirm thy Brethren and ratifie them in wholesome Doctrine and Administration of the Sacraments which are the Holy Instruments of God so Instituted and Ordained for our Sanctification that without them his Grace is not to be received But to Preach or to administer the Sacraments a Woman may not be admitted to do neither may she be Supream of Christ's Church The Fourth and Last chief point of Spiritual Government which I promised to Note unto you doth consist in the Excommunication and Spiritual Punishment of all such as shall approve themselves not to be the Obedient Children of Christ's Church Of which Authority our Saviour Christ speaks in St. Matthew's Gospel in the 18th Chapter saying If your Brother offending will not hear your charitable admonition whether secretly at first or yet before one or two Witnesses then we must complain of him to the Church and If he will not hear the Church let him be taken as an Heathen or Publican So the Apostle did Excommunicate the
vertue of Christ's Assistance after the words of Consecration are duly pronounced by the Priest the Natural Body of Christ conceived of the Virgin Mary is really present under the species of Bread and Wine As also his Natural Blood Secondly That after the Consecration there remains not the Substance of Bread and Wine nor any Substance but the Substance of God and Man Thirdly that the true Body of Christ and his Blood is offered for a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the Quick and Dead Fourthly That the Supream Power of Feeding and Governing the Militant Church of Christ and of Confirming their Brethren is given to Peter the Apostle and to his lawful Successors in the See Apostolick as unto the Vicars of Christ. Fifthly That the Authority to handle and define such things as belong to Faith the Sacraments and Ecclesiastical Discipline hath hitherto ever belonged and only ought to belong unto the Pastors of the Church whom the Holy Spirit hath placed in the Church and not unto Lay-men These Articles they caused to be Engr●…ssed and so commended them to the Care and Consideration of the Higher House presented by Boner to the hands o●… the Lord Keeper Bacon by whom they were candi●…ly received But they prevailed no further with the Queen or House of Peers when imparted to them than that possibly they might help forwards the aforementioned Disputation It was on the Four and twentieth of June that that the 〈◊〉 Liturgy was to be officiated in all the Churches of the Kingdom In the performance o●… which service the Bishops giving no encouragement and many of the Clergy being backw●…d in it it was thought fit to put them to a Final T●…st and either to bring them to Conformity or to bestow their ●…laces and 〈◊〉 on m●…re ●…actable P●…sons The Bishops at that time were reduced into a narrow●… 〈◊〉 than at any other time bef●… ●…ere being no more than Fifteen of that 〈◊〉 Order 〈◊〉 alive These being ●…alled by certain of the Lords of the 〈◊〉 were required to take the Oath of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Landaff only takes it who having ●…merly submitted to every Change resolved to shew himself no Chang●…ing in not conforming to the pleasures of the Higher Powers By all the rest it was refused Whereupon they were deprived of their Bishopricks The Bishops being thus put out the Oath is tendred next to the Deans and Chapters and lastly to the rural Clergy Thus ●…r Heylyn It is here to be noted That during the forementioned Convocation there came from both the Universities a Writing signed by a publick Notary by which they both signified their concurrence to the aforesaid Articles only with a little alteration of the last But these Declarations and Protestations of the whole Representative Clergy and Universities were not like to signifie much since a Change of Religion was absolutely resolved on CHAP. V. Of an Ignorant and Illiterate Clergy and a medley of Calvinists introduced to Govern this New Church and of some other particulars concerning the Settlement of it Dr. Heylyn pag. 115. BY the Deprivations of these Persons and the death of so many in the last years sickness there was not to be found a sufficient number of Learned men to supply the Cures Which filled the Church with an Ignorant and Illiterate Clergy Whose Learning went no further than the Liturgy or the Book of Homilies but otherwise conformable which was no small felicity to the rules of the Church And on the otherside many were raised to great preferments who having spent their time of 〈◊〉 in such Forreign Churches as followed the Platform of Geneva returned so disaffected to Episcopal Government and unto the Rites and Ceremonies here by Law established as not long after filled the Church with most sad disorders not only to the breaking of the Bond of Peace but likewise to the extinguishing the Spirit of Unity And not to speak of private Opinions nothing was more considered in them than their zeal against Popery On which account we find the Queens Professor at Oxford to pass amongst the Non-Conformists though some-what more moderate than the rest And Cartwright at Cambridge to prove an unextinguished Fire-brand to the Church of England Wittington the chef Ring-leader of the Frankfort-Schismaticks preferred unto the Deanry of Durham From thence encouraging Knox and Goodman in setting up Presbytery and Sedition in the Kirk of Scotland Sampson advanced to the Deanry of Christ's-Church and within a few years after turned out again for an incorrigible Non-conformist Hardiman one of the first Twelve Prebends of the Church of Westminster deprived soon after for throwing down the Altar and defacing the Vestments of the Church The Pope being informed of these proceedings labours to Perswade the Queen from going on with these Alterations in Religion But that not succeeding She sent out by the Advice of her Council a certain Body of Injunctions the same in effect with those which had been published in the First of King Edward but more accommodated to the temper of the present time Nothing more singular in them than the severe course taken about Ministers Marriages But this was long since worn out of use and not much observed when it first came out As if it had been published only in way of Caution to make the Clergy-men more wary in the choice of their Wives rather than with any purpose of pursuing it to an Execution Concerning the Position of the Holy Table it was ordered thus by these Injunctions viz. That no Altar should be taken down but by over-sight of the Curate of the Church or the Church-wardens or one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at least wherein no riotous or disordered manners were to be used And that the Holy Table in every Church should be decently made and set in the place where the Altar stood and there commonly covered as thereto belonged and as should be appointed by the Visitors And so to stand saving when the Communion of the Sacrament was to be Administred At which time the same should be placed within the Quire or Chancel as whereby the Minister might be more conveniently heard of the Communicants in his Prayer and Administration and the Communicants also more conveniently and in more number Communicate with the said Minister And after the Communion done from time to time the said Table to be placed where it stood before By these Injunctions she made way for her visitation regulated by the Book of Articles By which Articles all Images were removed out of the Church and all the Roods and other Images which had been taken out of the Churches were burnt in St Paul's Church-Yard Cheapside and other places of the City And in some places the Copes Vestments Altar-cloths Books Sepulchers and Rood-lofts were burnt altogether Thus far Dr. Heylyn concerning the first progress of this Change of Religion established by Parliament A short Note concl●…g the Occurrences of this year I Will end the Occurrences of this year with the Relation of a
That all the Doctrins and Practices which this Nation hath deserted in these Changes of Religion were delivered to us by those Apostolical Men that converted the Saxons our Predecessors to the Christian Faith and this by the Confession of many Learned Protestants themselves Which being so it must necessarily be granted that we have as much certainty of the Truth of those Doctrins and Practices as we have of any other Doctrins or Practices in Christianity Since they were all confirmed to us by the same Miracles that first made us Christians So that if they be now found to be false and erroneous all the other Doctrins and Practices of Christianity must be so likewise since the truth of them all depends upon the same Testimony To wit the Miracles that were then wrought and the Authority of those Apostolical men that delivered them to us Now for warrant of what I have here said concerning this besides the Testimony of St. Gregory's Writings Liturgy Ritual Missal c. and besides the ancient Ecclesiastical History especially of England and the Synods anciently Assembled in this Nation I appeal to the Confession of the most Learned Protestants as Humfr●…y Fulk the Centuriators of Magdeburg c. Whose words describing the Religion brought into England by St. Gregory and St. Augustin the Benedictin Monk are these They brought in say they Altars Holy Vestments Images Chalices Candlesticks Censors Sacred Vessels Holy-Water and Sprinkling with it Reliques and the Translation of them Dedication of Churches with the Bones and Ashes of Dead men Consecrations of Altars of Chalices of Corporeals of Baptismal Fonts of Chrysme of Oyl of Churches by using sprinkling of Holy-Water Celebration of the Mass use of the Archiepiscopal Pall in the Solemnizing of the Mass Books of Roman Rituals and a Burden of Ceremonies Free-will Merit and Justification by Works Pennance Satisfaction Purgatory Single-life of Priests Publick Invocation of Saints and Worship of them Veneration of Images Exorcisms Indulgences Vows Monachism Transubstantiation Prayer for the Dead Exercise of the Jurisdiction of the Roman Bishop and his Primacy over all Churches In a word the remaining Chaos as these zealous Reformers are pleased to call them of Popish Superstition Here you have had it clearly confessed by these Protestants that these Doctrins and Practices were delivered unto us by those that first Converted our Predecessors the Saxons to the Christian Faith And therefore be your self a Judge whether these men do with Justice and Reason call the said Doctrins and Practices Superstitions And withal by this you may further perceive how unjust all the Choppings and Changes in Religion have been which have been related to you in this Book And moreover it will appear That by these proceedings we have renounced our Right and made our selves uncapable of defending the Truth of our Christianity Since if those who first brought us the News of it and Converted us to it brought such a Mass of Superstitions with it as Protestants are pleased to call them then it is evident we cannot be certain of the Truth of any Thing they taught us Thus we may see how unjust we have been to our selves in pretending these Reformations of Religion Now yet further to manifest the sad condition of this Nation in having thus deserted its Mother-Church I will here annex some other Additional Chapters to make this appear CHAP. II. Testimonies of Scripture evidently convincing That there can be no hope of Salvation for such as are separated from the Church by Heresie or Schism SAint Paul says Rom. 16. 17. I beseech you Brethren observe those who make Schisms and Scandals contrary to the Doctrin which you have been taught and avoid them For such men serve not our Lord Jesus Christ but their own belly and by kind Speeches and Benedictions seduce the hearts of the simple Annotations St. Paul here carefully warns them to take heed of Seditious sowers of Sects and dissention in Religion and this ever to be the mark to know them by to wit If they teach or move them to any thing which was not agreeable to that which they had learned at their Conversion Not bidding them to examine the case by the Scriptures but by their First Form of Faith and Religion delivered to them before they had or did read any Book of the new Testament Now his saying That such Seducers serve their own belly does evidently manifest that howsoever Hereticks pretend in words and external shew of their Sheeps-coat to preach the Truth yet indeed they seek but after their own profit and pleasure And by the Apostle's own Testimony here we are warranted so to judge of them as of men that indeed have no Religion nor Conscience Now to manifest how much such Hereticks are to be detested he writes thus to Titus Tit. 3. 10. 11. A man that is an Heretick after the first and second admonition avoid Knowing that he that is such an one is subverted and sinneth being condemned by his own judgment Annotations It is here to be noted that not every one who errs in Religion is an Heretick but he only that after the Churches determination wilfully and stubbornly stands in his false Opinion not yielding to the Decrees of Councils or to the chief Pastors of the Church therein T●…y saith St. Augustin Epist. 162. that defend their Opinions although they be false and erroneous with no stubborness nor obstinacy especially if they be such as themselves did not broach by bold presumption but received them of their deceived Parents and do seek the Truth warily and carefully being ready to be reformed if they find it such are not to be reputed Hereticks And again Lib. 18. De Civitat Dei Cap. 11. They that in the Church of Christ hold any unsound or erroneous Opinion if being admonished to be of a right and sound Opinion they resist obstinately and will not amend their pestiferous opinions but persist in defence of them are thereby become Hereticks and going forth out of the Church are to be accounted for Enemies that Exercise us to wit by Disputing against them Again Lib. 4. De Baptism cont Donatist cap. 16. He is an Heretick that when the Doctrin of Catholick Faith is made plain and manifest to him had rather resist it and chuse that which himself held And in divers places he declares that St. Cyprian though he held an Error yet was no Heretick because he would not defend it after a General Council had declared it to be Erroneous Lib. 2. De Bapt. Cap. 4. So Possidonius in the Life of St. Augustin Vit. August cap. 18. reports how after the Determination of the See Apostolick to wit that Pelagius his Opinion was Heretical all men esteemed Pelagius an Heretick and the Emperor made Laws against him as against an Heretick Again St. Augustin says Lib. De Utilit Credendi cap. 1. He is an Heretick in my opinion that for some Temporal Commodity and specially for his Glory and
never be crowned Thus St. Cyprian Now concerning the Supereminent Power of Bishops in the Church as to the Excommunication of Hereticks and of the effect thereof St. Jerom Epist. ad Heliodorum cap. 7. has these remarkable words God forbid saith he I should speak sinistrously of them who succeeding the Apostles in degree make Christ's Body with their holy mouths by whom we are made Christians who having the Keys of Heaven do after a sort judge before the day of Judgment who in sobriety and chastity have the keeping of the Spouse of Christ to wit his Church And a little after They may deliver me up to Satan to the destruction of my Flesh that the Spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus And in the old Law whosoever was disobedient to the Priests was either cast out of the Camp and so stoned of the People or laying down his neck to the Sword expiated his offence by his Blood But now the Disobedient is cut off with the spiritual Sword or being cast out of the Church is torn by the furious mouth of Devils Thus St. Jerom. The Church's Practice in this is taken from the Example of St. Paul 1 Tim. 1. 19. where having exhorted Timothy to preserve his Faith and a good Conscience he presently adds Which certain repelling have made shipwrack about the Faith that is of their Faith of whom is Hymenaeus and Alexander whom I have delivered to Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme Now to prevent our being Seduced by Hereticks St. Paul says 2 Tim. 3. 1. And this know you that in the last days shall approach perillous times and Men shall be lovers of themselves covetous haughty proud blasphemous not obedient to their Parents unkind wicked without affection without peace accusers incontinent unmerciful without benignity traytors stubborn puffed up and lovers of voluptuousness more than of God having an appearance indeed of Piety but denying the vertue thereof and these avoid For these be they that craftily enter into houses and lead captive silly Women laden with sins which are led with divers desires always learning and never attaining to the knowledge of the truth But as Jannus and Jambres resisted Moses so these also resist the Truth men corrupted in mind reprobate concerning the Faith But they shall prosper no further For their folly shall be manifest to all as theirs also was All these words St. Cyprian Epist. 55. Num. 3. Expounds of such as by pride and disobedience resist God's Priests Let no faithful man saith he that keepeth in mind our Lords and the Apostles Admonition marvel if he see in the latter times some proud and stubborn fellows and the Enemies of God's Priests go out of the Church or impugn the same when both our Lord and the Apostle foretold us that such should be Now one Reason why the going out of the Church by Heresie is so great a crime is because the Church is always preserved from Error by the priviledge of Christ's Presence of the Holy Ghosts Assistance of our Lords Promise and Prayer of which see St. Augustin upon those words of the 118 Psalm Conc. 13. Ne auferas de ore meo verbum veritatis usque quâque Where he writes admirably of this matter To the same purpose also these words of Lactantius are very remarkable It is the Catholick Church only that keeps the true Worship of God This is the Fountain of Truth This is the House of Faith This is the Temple of God into which if a Man enter not or from which if any Man goes out he is an Alien and Stranger from the hope of everlasting life and salvation No Man must by obstinate contention flatter himself for it stands upon Life and Salvation St. Cyprian Epist. 55. ad Cornel. Num. 3. says The Church never departs from that which she once hath known And St. Irenaeus lib. 1. cap. 3. That the Apostles have laid up in the Church as in a rich Treasury all Truth It were an infinite labour to recite all that the Fathers say of this matter All counting it a most pernicious absurdity to affirm That the Church of Christ may err in Doctrins of Faith St. John the Apostle 1 John 2. 18. says Little Children it is the last hour and as ye have heard that Antichrist comes now there are become many Antichrists whereby we know that it is the last hour They went out from us but they were not of us St. Cyprian upon this place writes thus Epist. 76. Num. 1. ad Magnum The holy Apostle St. John did not put a difference betwixt one Heresie or Schism and another nor meant any sort that especially separated themselves but generally called All without exception Antichrists that were adversaries to the Church or were gone out from the same And a little after It is evident that All be here called Antichrists that have severed themselves from the Charity and Unity of the Catholick Church Concerning St. Peter's Supremacy or Charge of the whole Church from which Hereticks separate themselves St. Cyprian writes thus Lib. de Unitat. Ecclesiae To Peter saith he our Lord after his Resurrection said Feed my Sheep and built his Church upon him alone and to him he gives the charge of Feeding his Sheep For although after his Resurrection he gave his Power alike to all saying As my Father sent me so I send you Receive the Holy Ghost If you remit to any their sins they shall be remitted c. Yet to manifest Unity he constituted one Chair and so disposed by his Authority that Unity should have origin of one The rest of the Apostles were that which Peter was in equal Fellowship of Honor and Power but the beginning comes of Unity the Primacy is given to Peter that the Church of Christ may be shewed to be one and one Chair St. Chrysostom also says thus Lib. 2. de Sacerdot Why did our Lord shed his Blood Truly to redeem those Sheep the Cure of which he committed both to Peter and also to his Successors And a little after Christ would have Peter endowed with such Authority and to be far above all his other Apostles For he saith Peter Dost thou love me more than all These do Whereupon our Master might have inferred If you love me Peter use much Fasting Sleep on the hard Floor Watch much be a Patron to the Oppressed a Father to Orphans and Husband to Widows But omitting all These things he says Feed my Sheep For all the other Vertues certainly may be done easily by many Subjects not only Men but also Women but when it cometh to the Government of the Church and committing the charge of many Souls all Women-kind must needs give place to the burden and greatness thereof and a great number of Men also St. Gregory likewise Lib. 4. Epist. 76 writes thus It is plain to all men saith he that ever read the Gospel that by our Lord's mouth the charge of the whole Church
was committed to St. Peter Prince of the Apostles For unto him it was said Feed my Sheep For him was the Prayer made that his Faith should not fail To him were the Keys of Heaven given and Authority to bind and loose To him the Cure of the Church and Principality was delivered And yet he was not called the Universal Apostle This Title indeed was offered for the honor of St. Peter Prince of the Apostles to the Pope of Rome by the holy Council of Chalcedon but none of that See did ever use it or consent to take it Thus St. Gregory St. Paul ad Corinth 1. 2. 15. says The Spiritual man judgeth all things Annotations St. Irenaeus lib. 4. cap. 6. excellently declaring That the Church and every Spiritual Child thereof judges and condemns all false Prophets and Hereticks of what sort soever At length concludes with these remarkable words The Spiritual man shall judge also all that make Schisms who are cruel not having the love of God and who respecting more their own private to wit Interest than the Unity of the Church mangle divide and as much as in them lies kill for small causes the great and glorious Body of Christ to wit his Church Speaking Peace and seeking Battel He to wit the Spiritual man shall judge likewise such as be out of the Truth that is to say out of the Church Which Church shall be under no man's judgment for to the Church are all things known in which is perfect Faith of the Father and of all the Dispensation of Christ and firm knowledge of the Holy Ghost that teacheth all Truth It is said Acts 11. 26. That the Disciples were at Antioch first named Christians Annotations This name Christian ought to be common to all the Faithful and other new Names of Schismaticks and Sectaries must be abhorred If you hear Saith St. Hierom contr Lucif cap. 7. in fine any where such as be said to be of Christ not to have their Names of our Lord Jesus Christ but to be called after some other certain Name as Marcionites Valentinians as now also the Lutherans Calvinists Protestants c. know you that they belong not to the Church of Christ but to the Synagogue of Antichrist Lanctantius also lib. 7. Divinarum Institution cap. 30. saith thus When Phrygians or Novatians or Valentinians or Marcionites or Anthropomorphites or Arians or any other to wit such Sects be named they cease to be Christians Who having left the Name of Christ have assumed the Names of Men. Neither can our now Sectaries help or excuse themselves by objecting That we are called Papists For besides that it is by them scornfully invented as the name Homousians was by the Arians This Name is not of any one Man Bishop of Rome or elsewhere known to be the Author of any Schism or Sect as their callings be but it is of a whole State and order of Governors and that of the chief Governors to whom we are bound to cleave in Religion and to obey in all things concerning it So that to be a Papist is to be a Christian a Child of the Church and a Subject of Christ's Vicar And therefore against such impudent Sectaries as compare the Faithful for following the Pope to the diversity of Hereticks bearing the names of new Masters let us ever have in readiness this saying of St. Hierom writing to Pope Damasus Hierom Epist. ad Damasum Vitalis I know not Miletius I refuse I know not Paulinus Whosoever gathereth not with you scattereth That is to say Whosoever is not Christs is Antichrists And again If any man joyns with Peter's Chair he is mine that is he is of one Faith with me It is here further to be observed That this name Christian given to all Believers and the whole Church was especially taken to distinguish them from Jews and Heathens which believed not at all in Christ And the same now likewise severeth and makes Christians known from Turks and others who believe nothing of the Divinity of Christ. But when Hereticks began to rise up among Christians which Hereticks professed Christs Name and sundry Articles of Faith as true Believers do then the name of Christian was too common to distinguish such Hereticks and make them known from true Believers who were entirely sound in their Faith And therefore to distinguish these from such true and faithful Believers of All Doctrines of Christian Faith the Apostles inspired by the Holy Ghost put into the Creed the name Catholick which is as much as to say A true and faithful Believer of all Christian Doctrin And by this it appears evidently That no Heretick is a Catholick although they falsely pretend to it when they are pr●…ssed with this Article of the Creed To confirm what hath been here said St. Pacianus Epist. ad Sympherianum writes thus When Heresies were risen and endeavoured by divers Names to tear the Dove of God and Queen to wit the Church and to rent her in pieces the Apostolical People reqired their Sir-name whereby the uncorrupt People might be distinguished c. and so those that before were called Christians are now Sirnamed Catholicks Christian is my Name saith he Catholick my Sirname And thus the word Catholick is a proper note by which the Apostles in their Creed taught us to discern the true Church from the false Heretical Congregations of all sorts of Hereticks And not only the meaning of the word which signifies Universality of Times Places and Persons but likewise the very name and word it self by God's Providence has been always and only appropriated to True Believers And though sometimes at the beginning or first rising up of Sects challenged by them yet never obtained by Hereticks as their constant Name Wherefore St. Augustin sayes In the lap of the Church the very name of Catholick keeps me Aug. contr Epist. Fundament cap. 4. And again Tract 32. in Joan. We receive the Holy Ghost if we love the Church if we be joyned together by Charity if we rejoyce in the Catholick Name and Faith And again Tom. 1. libr. de verâ Religione cap. 7. We must hold the Communion of the Church which is named Catholick not only of her own but also of all her Enemies For will they nill they the Hereticks also and Schismaticks themselves when they speak not with their own Fellows but with Strangers call the Catholick Church nothing else but the Catholick Church For they would not be understood unless they discerned it that is expressed it by this Name by which she is called of all the World Thus far of the Testimonies of the Fathers concerning Schisms CHAP. IV. The Reason of this great Severity of both Scriptures and Fathers against Heresie and Schism NOw the reason of this great Severity of the Fathers excluding all from any hope of Salvation that are divided from the Unity of the Church by Schism or Heresie is manifested by St. Augustin in a Discourse of his upon those
very Gall of Schism by usurping an Authority which express Scripture says belongs only to Pastors I fear much fewer than is ordinarily imagined of those who have any liberal Education will be excused from this sin by any Ignorance Surreptition Provocation c. by reason of that great evidence and light which they have of the continued Succession Unity of Doctrin perfect Obedience to their spiritual Superiors Pennances and Retirements from the World and several other signal marks of the One Holy Catholick and Apostclick Church Some may be more deeply guilty and obnoxious to a heavier damnation than others as Ring-leaders more than their Followers But Damnation is by the Fathers generally denounced as the portion of them all Thus of the sin of Schism CHAP. VI. Of the Schism of the Church of England NOw whereas some Protestants seek to vindicate the Church of England from Schism by likening it to the Church of St. Cyprian of whom it is said That it condemned no man nor separated none from its Communion yet you are to know that this Plea helps them not at all For although this Moderation did exempt St. Cyprian from Schism because as St. Augustin says The Church had not then decided the dispute to whose decision St. Cyprian would certainly have submitted Yet this Moderation does not at all exempt the Church of England from Schism because her separation from her mother-Mother-Church is for very many Doctrins of Faith defined and determined by the same Church This following Example will make the Case of the Church of England evidently appear For if for Example a Province in England had with-drawn it self from the Publick Civil Authority this Excuse would not exempt them from being Rebels to say We do not intend to quarrel with Those that continue in Obedience to the King we mean neither him nor them any harm They shall be welcome to come among us if they will we will be good friends we will not meddle with their doings but we will be governed only by our own Laws and Magistrates c. I believe I say This would not take from them the Guilt of Rebellion Their Civility in such their Rebellion would not change the Title of their crime nor free them from the punishment due unto it It may perhaps qualifie the Prince's resentment but the civilest Treason is Treason In this Point of Schism to the end that Doctor Peirce in his Court-Sermon may clear Protestants and lay the weight of so great a crime on the Catholick Church he argues thus Since besides the corruptions in Practice which yet alone cannot justifie separation there were in the Roman Church so many corruptions in Doctrin likewise entrenching on Fundamentals the Schism could not be on the Church of England's side which was obliged to separate so just cause being given but on theirs who gave the cause of the separation This Plea of the Doctors if it be admitted totally destroys all Governments and lays all the Guilt of Schisms and Rebellions in Church and State upon Civil and Ecclesiastical Governors For if Subjects may accuse their Governors and be themselves Judges of the Justice of such their Accusations the Governors are always sure to be condemned and pronounced guilty and the Subject justified Now to admit this Liberty of the Subject in Church-Government above all others is the most unjust Thing imaginable because that Government is protected from all error in Doctrins of Faith by the assistance of the Holy Ghost who was sent by our Saviour to teach it all Truth Wherefore to tax that Government with Errors in Faith is either to tax the Holy Ghost with them or to blaspheme against our Saviour by saying he has not kept his word in sending the Holy Ghost to teach the Church All truth Besides There is this other consideration which doth further manifest the weakness of this the Doctor 's Plea For if the Church of Rome be our Mother-Church as King James acknowledged her to be in a publick Speech made to his Parliament wherein he says I acknowledge the Church of Rome to be our Mother-Church See Stow pag. 840. then it will follow as it was urg'd in Parliament by Doctor Heath Archbishop of York in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth That if now after so many Ages this Church of Rome be found an Erroneous Church then we have hitherto received no benefit by our Christianity but rather have been all along deceived Since if this Mother-Church be false the Doctrin which she taught us must necessarily be false A Church being said to be false because she teacheth false Doctrin Thus the Doctor may see what he has gotten by his Reformation There is one thing yet that deserves well to be taken notice of in this change of Religion here in England For if all the Clergy and the Universities had generally assented to this Change it might have seemed a lesser crime But to have this done as de facto it was done in Queen Elizabeths Reign by Laymen only and this only with the Difference of Six Voices in Parliament although that Parliament was pack'd for this purpose and in opposition to the contrary Protestations and Declarations of all the Clergy and Universities This does heighten this crime to the utmost of all Impiety I will yet for a close add one thing more which does not a little manifest this Impiety For although Reformation of Religion was here pretended yet it evidently appears by our English History that nothing but worldly and carnal Interests carried on this business For was not the Liberty obtained by King Henry the Eighth to bring into his Bed a new handsom Wife instead of his former vertuous Queen a very carnal Interest Was not his invading all the Possessions and Treasure of Monasteries a great Secular Interest Was not the dividing the said Lands amongst the Nobility and Gentry at very easie rates a very great Interest In King Edward's days was not the Protector 's seizing on the remainder of Churchspoyls a great Interest Was not the freeing of Clergy-men from a necessity of saying daily and almost hourly long Ecclesiastical Offices from lying alone without Bedfellows c. matters of great both carnal and secular Interest Was not the exempting of All both Layity and Ecclesiasticks from the Duty of confessing their Sins and submitting themselves to Penitential Satisfactions from rigorous Fasts out of Conscience and Religion and other Austerities a matter of considerable Interest to Flesh and corrupt Nature By what hath been hitherto said appears but even too clearly how that the Fundamental Rule of all Government and Subordination was utterly neglected in England at the time that the pretended Reformation was contrived and executed Here is a new and thorough moulding of a Church both in Doctrins and Discipline called a Reformation Wherein all the Synodical Acts of this Church since Christianity entred among us are as to any obliging Power by their Authority reversed wherein all the Decisions of
Patriarchal Councils yea of Oecumenical Synods are called into Examination All their Laws so far as to them seemed meet reformed the whole regard that England had to all other Catholick Churches as a Member of the whole is utterly broken by one National Church Nay not so much By one Luxurious King By one Child and by one Woman Even when the whole Body of the Clergy protested against it Let the world now be judge Whether this Action can be justified Thus of the Schism of the Church of England CHAP. VII The Assertions of some Protestants concerning Church-Authority And of some of them concerning the Dignity and Authority of the Church of Rome SChism and Heresie being here so evidently demonstrated to consist in denying Obedience to Church-Authority it may seem strange to find any Protestants so much to their own condemnation to write any thing in defence of such Church-Authority and particularly of the Authority of the Church of Rome from which they have separated totally casting off all obedience to it But yet this they have done as will appear by these following Testimonies of some very Eminent amongst them See Sir Edwyn Sands in his Europae Speculum Numb 12. where he has this following Discourse of the Security in submitting to the Authority of the Church of Rome Which although he delivers in the Person of a Catholick yet it is without Reply or seeking to deny the Truth of any thing here said The Discourse then is this SInce Christianity is a Doctrin of Faith a Doctrin whereof all Men are capable as being in gross and in general to be believed by all and since the high Vertue of Faith is in the Humility of the Understanding and the Merit thereof in the readiness of Obedience to Embrace it and withal since of outward proofs of our Faith where the true sense of Scripture is disputed the Churches Testimony whether for declaring to us the sense of Scripture or the judgments of the Ancients is a proof of most weight What madness were it for any man to tire out his Soul and to wast away his Spirits in tracing out all the thorny paths of the Controversies of these days wherein to err is no less easie than dangerous what through forgery of Authors abusing him what through sophistry beguiling him what through passion and prejudice transporting him and not rather betake himself to the right path of Truth whereunto God Nature Reason and Experience do all give witness And that is to associate himself to the Church whereunto the custody of this Heavenly and supernatural Truth hath been from Heaven it self committed To weigh discreetly which is the true Church and that being once found to receive faithfully and obediently without doubt or discussion whatsoever it delivers Now to discover this let him reflect that besides the Roman Church and such others as are United with it he finds all other Churches to have had their end or decay long since or their beginning but of late This Church was founded by the Prince of the Apostles with a promise to him from Christ That Hell Gates should never prevail against it Matt. 16. 18. And that himself would be assistant to it to the Consummation of the World It hath now continued Sixteen hundred years with an Honorable and certain Line of near Two hundred and forty Popes Successors of St. Peter both Tyrants Traytors Pagans and Hereticks in vain wresting raging and undermining it All the Lawful general Councils that ever were in the World have from time to time approved and honored it God hath so miraculously blessed it from above that many Learned and wise Doctors have enriched it with their Writings Armies of Saints with their Holiness and Virtues Armies of Martyrs with their Blood and of Virgins with their Purity have sanctified and embellished it And even at this day in such difficulties of unjust Rebellions and unnatural Revolts of her nearest Children yet she stretcheth out her arms to the utmost corners of the World newly embracing whole Nations into her bosom Lastly in all other opposite Churches there are found inward dissensions and contrarieties change of opinions uncertainty of resolutions with robbing of Churches rebelling against Governors confusion of Order Whereas contrariwise in this Church there is the Unity undivided the resolutions unaltered the most heavenly Order reaching from the hight of all Power to the lowest of all Subjection all with admirable Harmony and undefective correspondence bending the same way to the effecting of the same work all which do promise no other than a continual encrease and victory Wherefore let no Man doubt to submit himself to this glorious Spouse of Christ. This then being accorded to be the true Church of God it follows that she be reverently obeyed in all things without further inquisition she having the warrant that he that hears her hears Christ and whosoever hears her not hath no better place with God than a Publican or Pagan And what folly were it to receive Scriptures upon the credit of her Authority and not to receive the interpretation of them upon her Authority also and credit And if God should not always protect his Church from Error and yet peremptorily command Men always to obey her then had he made very slender provision for the Salvation of Mankind which conceit concerning God whose care of us even in all things touching this transitory Life is so plain and evident would render us very ungratefully impious And hard were the case and mean had his regard been of the vulgar People whose wants and difficulties in this life and whose capacities will not suffice to sound the deep and hidden Mysteries of Divinity and to search the truth of intricate Controversies if there were not others whose Authority they might safely follow and rely upon Blessed are they who believe and have not seen Joh. 20. 29. The merit of whose Religious Humility and Obedience exceeds perhaps in honor and acceptation before God the subtle and profound knowledge of many others Thus Sir Edwyn Sands To the same purpose Dr. Jeremy Taylor in his Treatise of the Liberty of Prophesying These following Considerations says he may very easily perswade persons of much reason and more Piety to maintain that which they know to have been the Religion of their Fore-fathers which had actual possession and seizure of Mens minds and understandings before the opposite Professions had a name As first its Doctrin having had a long continuance and possession of the Church Which therefore cannot easily be supposed in the present professors to be a design since they have received it from so many Ages And it is not likely that all Ages should have the same purposes or that the same Doctrin should serve the several ends of divers Ages Secondly its long prescription which is such an advantage that it cannot with many Arguments be retrenched as relying upon these grounds to wit that Truth is more Ancient than Falshood and that God would not
for so many Ages forsake his Church and leave her in an Error Again the beauty and splendor of that Church their Solemn Service the stateliness and magnificence of their Hierarchy their name of Catholick which they claim as their own due and to concern no other Sect of Christianity The Antiquity of their Doctrin the continual Succession of their Bishops their immediate derivation from the Apostles Their Title to Succed St. Peter whose Personal Prerogatives were so great The Honorable Expressions concerning this Church from many eminent Bishops of other inferior Sees which being old Records have obtain'd a credibility The multitude and variety of People which are of their Perswasion Apparent consent with elder Ages in matters Doctrinal The Advantage which is derived to them by retaining the Doctrin of the Church of Ancient times The great consent one part with another in that which they affirm to be de Fide The great differences which are commenced amongst their Adversaries abusing the liberty of Prophesying unto a very great Licentiousness Their happiness in being instrumental in converting divers Nations The advantage of Monarchical Government and the benefit which they daily enjoy by it The Piety and the Austerity of their Religious Orders of Men and Women The single life of their Priests and Bishops The riches of their Church The severity of their Fasts and other their Exterior Observances The great Reputation of their Bishops for Faith and Sanctity The known Holiness of some of those Persons whose Institutes the Religious Persons do now imitate and follow Their Miracles The Casualties and Accidents that have hapned to many of their Adversaries The oblique Acts and indirect Proceedings of some of those who have departed from them And among many other Things the names of Heretick and Schismatick which they fasten upon all that disagree from them c. Thus Dr. Taylor See the Learned Grotius declaring the impossibility of Uniting Christians into one Body but by their adhering to the Roman See What is the reason saith Grotius in his First Reply to Rivet ad Artic. 7. That such as differ in Opinion amongst Catholicks remain in the same Body not breaking Communion But on the contrary when dissensions happen amongst Protestants they cannot thus compose Disputes and oppositions although they speak much of Fraternal Love Now he that shall examine this well will find how much force and power there is in the Primacy Thus he This brings to mind that saying of St. Jerom concerning St. Peter's Primacy Wherefore amongst the Twelve One was chosen that a Head being constituted and appointed all occasion of Schism might be taken away Hieronym lib. 1. cap. 14. advers Jovinian Now again the same Grotius in the close of his last Reply to Rivet written not long before his death writes thus It is well known that Grotius has always wished for a Restitution and Reuniting of Christians into one and the same Body He was sometime of Opinion that this might have been begun by a Conjunction or Union of Protestants amongst themselves But he afterwards discerned that this was impossible to be effected because besides that most of all the Calvinists are totally averse from any such Peace or Union Protestants are not associated or united under any Common Ecclesiastical Government which is the cause why the diverse parts of them cannot be collected into one Body And withal this is the Reason that they must necessarily still divide into more new Sects or Parts Wherefore Grotius now plainly sees and judges as likewise many others with him that Protestants can never be united amongst themselves unless they be joyned with those that adhere to the Roman See whithout which no common Government can be expected in the Church And therefore he wishes that the Division and Separation which has been made and likewise the causes of it may be taken away Now amongst these the Primacy of the Bishop of Rome according to the Canons cannot be looked upon as one cause even by the Confession of Melancthon himself who thinks that Premacy to be necessary for the retaining and preserving of Unity Thus Grotius concering the Uniting all Christans by their adhering to the Roman See See Doctor Field in the Preface to his Book of the Church recommending the ending all Disputes in Religion by a lawful Church-Authority Seeing saith he the Controversies in Religion in our times are grown in number so many and in matters so intricate that few have time and leisure fewer strength of understanding to examine them what remaineth for men desirous of satisfaction in Things of such consequence but diligently to search out which amongst all the Societies of the World is that Blessed company of Holy Ones that Houshold of Faith that Spouse of Christ and Church of the Living God which is the Pillar and Ground of Truth that so he may embrace her Communion follow her Directions and rest in her Judgment Thus Dr. Field In like manner Dr. Hammond in his Treatise of Heresie Sect. 13. Num. 2 3. speaks thus of the Christians Security from the Divine Providence in his adherance in matters of Faith to Church Authority If we consider saith he God's great wise and constant Providence and care over his Church his desire that All Men should be saved and in order to that come to the knowledge of all necessary Truth his Promise That he will not suffer his Faithful Servants to be tempted above what they are able nor permit scandals and false Teachers to prevail to the seducing of the very Elect his most Pious Godly Servants If I say we consider These and some other such-like general Promises of Scripture wherein this question about the Errability of Councils seems to be concerned we shall have reason to believe that God will never suffer All Christians to fall into such a Temptation as it must be in case the whole Representative of the Church should err in matters of Faith and therein find approbation and reception amongst all Those Bishops and Doctors of the Church diffused which were out of the Council Thus he See also his Commentary on 1 Tim. 3. 15. The Church the Pillar and Ground of Truth According to this it is saith he that Christ is said Ephes. 4. 12. to have given not only Apostles c. but also Pastors and Teachers that is Bishops in the Church for the compacting the Saints into a Church for the building up of the Body of Christ confirming and continuing them in all Truth that we should be no more like Children carried about with every wind of Dectrin And so again when Heresies came into the Church in the first Ages 't is every where apparent by Ignatius his Epistles that the only way of avoiding Error and Danger was to adhere to the Bishop in Communion and Doctrin And whosoever departed from him and from that Form of wholesome words kept by him was supposed to be corrupted Thus far Dr. Hammond See Doctor Jackson on the