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A04468 A defence of the Apologie of the Churche of Englande conteininge an answeare to a certaine booke lately set foorthe by M. Hardinge, and entituled, A confutation of &c. By Iohn Iewel Bishop of Sarisburie. Jewel, John, 1522-1571.; Jewel, John, 1522-1571. Apologia Ecclesiae Anglicanae. English.; Harding, Thomas, 1516-1572. Confutation of a booke intituled An apologie of the Church of England. 1567 (1567) STC 14600.5; ESTC S112182 1,137,435 832

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sua Antichristum praecurrit I speake it boldely Who so euer calleth him selfe the Vniuersal Prieste or desireth so to be called as doth the Pope in the Pride of his harte he is the forerenner of Antichriste And when Iohn then Bishop of Constantinople had firste entred his claime vnto this title S. Gregorie made answeare vnto the same Ex hac eius Superbia quid aliud nisi propinqua iam esse Antichristi tempora designantur By this Pride of his what thinge els is signified but that the time of Antichriste is euen at hande Againe he saithe vpon occasion of the same Rex soperbiae propè est quod dici nefas est Sacerdotum est praeparatus exercitus The Kinge of Pride that is Antichriste is comminge to vs and an Armie of Priestes is prepared whiche thinge is wicked to be spoken S. Hierome saithe Antichristus omnem Religionem suae subijciet Potestati Antichriste shal cause al Religion to be subiecte to his Power I wil not here take vpon me to discrie either the Person or y● dwelling Place of Antichriste Who so hath eies to sée let him sée These Circūstances agree not vnto many S. Paule saith Antichriste woorketh the Mysterie or secrete practise of Iuiquitie Whereupon the Glose saith Mystica est Impietas Antichristi id est Pieratis nomine palliata The wickednesse of Antichriste is Mystical that is to saie It is not plaine open or easy to be espied of euery body but cloked vnder the name of Godlinesse And for as mutche as M. Hardinge thinketh wee misallege these Writers and violently force them to our side whether thei wil or no S. Bernarde saithe thus Bestia illa de Apocalypsi cui datum lest os loquens Blasphemias bellum gerere cum Sanctis Petri Cathedram occupat tanquam Leo paratus ad praedam That Beaste that is spoken of in the Booke of Reuelations vnto whiche Beaste is geuen a mouthe to speake Blashemies and to keepe warre againste the Sainctes of God is novve gotten into Peters Chaire as a Lion prepared to his praie Ioachimus Abbas saide aboue three hundred yéeres sithence Antichristus iam pridem natus est Romae altiùs se extollet in Sede Apostolica Antichriste is already borne in Rome and shal auaunce him selfe higher in the Apostolique See Arnulphus in the Councel of Remes saith thus Quid hunc Reuerēdi Patres in sublimi Solio residentem veste purpurea aurea radiantem quid hunc inquam esse censeris Nimirùm si charitate destituitur solaque scientia inflatur extollitur Antichristus est in Templo Dersedens sese oftendens tanquam sit Deus What thinke you Reuerend Fathers of this man be meaneth the Pope sittinge on highe in his Throne glitteringe in purple and clothe of Golde What thinke you him to be Verily if he be voide of Charitie and be blowen vp and auaunced onely with knowledge then is he Antichrist sitting in the Temple of God and shewing out him selfe as if he were God The Bishoppes in the Councel at Reinspurg saie thus Hildebrandus Papa sub specie Religionis iecit Fundamenta Antichristi Pope Hildebrande vnder a coloure of holinesse by forebiddinge Priestes mariage hath saide the Fundation for Antichriste Dante 's an Italian Poëte by expresse woordes calleth Rome the Whoore of Babylon Fanciscus Petrarcha likewise saithe Rome the Whoore of Babylon The Mother of al Idolatrie and Fornication the Sanctuarie of Heresie and the Schole of Errour I knowe these woordes wil séeme odious vnto many Therefore I wil staie spare the reste The Pope him selfe for that he sawe to whoe 's Person and credite these thinges belonged therefore in his Late Councel of Laterane gaue straite Commaundemente to al Preachers that noman shoulde dare once to speake of the Comminge of Antichriste The Apologie Cap. 17. Diuision 1. And what marueile if the Churche were then carried awaie with errours in that time specially when neither the Bishop of Rome who then onely ruled the roste nor almoste any other either didde his duetie or once vnderstoode what was his duetie For it is harde to be beleeued whiles they were idle and faste asleepe that the Diuel also al that while either fel asleepe or els continually laie idle For howe they were occupied in the meane time and with what faithfulnesse they tooke care of Goddes House though we holde our peace yet I praie you let them heare Bernarde theire owne frende The Bishoppes saith he vvho novve haue the charge of Goddes churche are not Teachers but Deceiuers They are not Feeders but Beguilers They are not Prelates but Pilates These wordes spake Bernarde of that Bishop who named him selfe the higheste Bishop of al and of the other Bishoppes likewise whiche then hadde the place of gouernemente Bernarde was no Lutherane Bernarde was no Heretike he had not forsaken the Catholike Churche yet neuerthelesse he did not lette to cal the Bishoppes that then were Deceiuers Beguilers Pilates Nowe when the people was openly deceiued and Christian mennes eies were craftily bleared and Pilate sate in Iudgement place and condemned Christe and Christes Members to Swerde and Fiere O good Lorde in what case was Christes Churche then But yet tel me of so many and so grosse errours what one erroure haue these menne at any time refourmed Or what faulte haue they once acknowledged and confessed M. Hardinge VVhy Sirs are ye so wel learned and so holy of life your selues that ye take vpon you to iudge the Bishop of Rome Christes chiefe officer in earthe and al other men before the time of your Apostates and Renegate Frters to haue ben both impious for not doing theire dutie and ignorant for not knowinge what was theire dutie VVas al Vertue so farre bannished al necessarie knowledge and Christian learninge so cleane put out that wee muste nowe beginne to learne how to beleue and howe to liue a Christian life of sutche light preachers Wicked vowbreakers lewde Lecherous Lurdens and detestable blasphemers as your deuilishe rable is S. Bernardes wordes to Eugenius be these Age indagemus adhuc diligentiùs quis sis c. VVel goe too Let vs somewhat more diligently examine what manner a man thou art what person thou bearest for the presente time in the Churche of God VVho art thou The greate Preieste the highest Bishop Thou arte the chiefe of al Bishoppes thou arte the heire of the Apostles for primacie thou arte Abel for Gouernement Noë for Patriarkship Abraham for holy order Melchiscdech for dignitie Aaron for Auctoritie Moyses for iudgemente Samuel for power Peter for thy anointinge Christe Thou art he●to whom the Keies were deliuered to whom the Shepe were committed There be also other porters of Heauen and Pastours of flockes But thou so mutche farre passinge al other as thou haste inherited bothe names mutche more indifferent They haue theire flockes assigned vnto them
Wée are not gonne from the Churche of God M. Hardinge Wée are gonne onely from you that haue so vnreuerently abused the Churche But ye feele good ease yée saie and are wel reliued by our departure as to vse your homely comparisons a sick body is reliued by a purgation God of his mercie graunt that yée maie likewise be purged of al the reste So shal yée féele more ease and be better reliued S. Hierome saithe Hebraei dicunt quòd ea nocte qua egressus est Israel ex Aegypto omnia in Aegypto Templa destructa sunt siue terrae motu fiue ictu fulminum Spiritualiter autem dicimus quòd egredientibus nobis ex Aegypto errorum Idola corruant omnis Peruersarum Doctrinarum cultura quatiatur The Rabines or Hebrewe Doctoures saie that the same night that Israel departed out of Egypte al the Idolatrous Temples in Egypte were destroied either by Earthquake or by Lighteninge But here of wee learne in a Spiritual sense that when wee departe out of Egypte that is to saie from the companie of Idolaters the Idolles of erroure falle to the grounde and al the honoure of false Doctrine is shaken downe Sutche reliefe M. Hardinge wée trust yée shal finde by our departure Beda expoundinge these woordes of the Apocalyps Comme foorthe from her my people and be not partetakers of her sinnes saithe thus Inducit discessionem quae est ruina Babylonis cùm enim Loth discesserit à Sodomis Sodomae funditùs tollentur S. Iohn speaketh of the departure whiche is the ruine and fal of Balylon For when Loth shal departe out of Sodome then shal Sodome vtterly be ouerthrowen Againe he saithe Post haec audiui vocem Alleluia Laus Gloria Virtus Deo nostro Haec nunc ex parte dicit Ecclesia Tunc autem perfectè dicet cùm discessio facta fuerit After this I hearde a voice Alleluia Praise and Glorie and Power be to our God This songe the Churche in parte singeth already But then shal shee in deede and perfitely singe it when departure shal be made from Antichriste or Babylon The Apologie Cap. 14. Diuision 1. For if they saie It is in no wise lawful for one to leaue the felowship wherein he hathe benne brought vp they maie aswel in our names vpon our heades likewise condemne the Prophetes the Apostles and Christe him selfe For why complaine they not also of this that Loth went quite his waie out of Sodome Abraham out of Chaldee the Israelites out of Egypte Christe from the Ievves and Paule from the Phariseis For excepte it be possible there maie be a lawful cause of Departinge wee see no reasone why Loth Abraham the Israelites Christe and Paule maie not be accused of Sectes and Seditions aswel as others M. Hardinge Yet bringe ye nothing to the purpose Your proufes be so weake and hange so euil togeather that we maie wel tel you whiche Irenaeus obiected to Heretikes that ye make a rope of sande VVe saie not it is in no wise lawful for one to leaue the felowship wherein he hath benne brought vp But contrary wise if the felowship be naught and wicked euery one is bound to eschewe it ▪ Depart from Babylon my people and be not ye partakers of her sinnes saith the heauenly voice to S. Iohn Therefore the examples ye bringe helpe nothinge your cause Loth went out of Sodome Abraham of Chaldea the Israèlites of Egypte Paule from the Phariseis by Gods special warninge VVhere ye saie Christe went from the Iewes onlesse ye referre it to his steppinge aside from them for a while ye shoulde rather haue saide the Iewes went from Christe But whereto perteineth this Though ye were so malicious as to compare the Catholike Churche to Sodome to Chaldea to Egypte to the Iewes and Phariseis yet I wene ye are not so proude as to compare your selues to Loth to Abraham to Gods peculiar people to Paule to Christe himselfe These departinges we allowe and God required them yours we blame and God detesteth The B. of Sarisburie Wée compare not our selues M. Hardinge neither with Loth nor with Abraham nor with Paule leaste of al with Christe him selfe But wée humbly submitte our selues both in life and in Doctrine to be guided by theire Examples And thus I truste we maie lawfully doo without iuste note of presumption S. Chrysostome saithe Data est tibi potestas diuinitùs imitandi Christum vt possis illi similis fieri Noli expauescere hoc audiens Timēdum enim tibi potiùs est si similis illi fieri negligas Thou haste power geeuen the from God to folowe Christe that thou maiste be like vnto him Be thou not afraide to heare this thinge Thou haste more cause to feare if thou refuse to be like vnto him Likewise saithe the Anciente Father Origen Si quem imitati volumus propositus est nobis Christus ad imitandum If wee desire to folowe any man Christe is set before vs that wee shoulde folowe him But if it be so Provvde a parte in Religion and Life to folowe Christe what is he then that claimeth to him selfe Christes Authoritie and calleth him selfe euen by the name of Christe You know of whom it is written Papa potest quicquid Christus ipse potest The Pope can doo what so euer Christe him selfe can doo Yee knowe who is wel contented to heare him selfe thus saluted Touchinge Primacie thou art Abel touchinge Gouernemente thou art Noē touchinge Patriarkship thou art Abraham touchinge Order thou art Melchisedech touchinge Dignitie thou art Aaron touchinge Authoritie thou art Moses touchinge Iudgemente thou art Samuel touchinge Power thou art Peter touchinge Anointinge thou art Christe These woordes I trowe M. Harding maie sommewhat séeme to sauoure of Pride The Apologie Cap. 14. Diuision 2. And if these menne wil needes condemne vs for Heretiques bicause we doo not al thinges at theire Commaundemente whom in Goddes Name or what kinde of menne ought they themselues to be taken for whiche despise the Commaundemente of Christe and of the Apostles M. Hardinge Our frailtie concerninge life we accuse and lamente and commende our selues to Gods infinite mercie Touchinge belefe and necessarie doctrine of faithe raile ye at vs neuer so mutche we neither despise the Commaundementes of Christe nor the ‡ traditions of the Apostles The Apologie Cap. 14. Diuision 3. If we be Schismatiques bicause we haue leaft them by what name then shal thei he called themselues whiche haue foresaken the Greekes from vvhom they firste receiued theire Faithe foresaken the Primitiue Churche foresaken Christe himselfe and the Apostles euen as if Children shoulde foresake theire parentes M. Hardinge VVho so euer departe from the Catholike Churche they be Schismatikes ye haue departed from the Catholike Churche of these nine hundred yeeres ergo ye be schismatikes The firste proposition ye wil not denie The seconde your selues confesse the conclusion then muste
he hath better remembred him selfe that the saide Oza was not a Kinge but onely a Prophete And yet yewis a childe could haue tolde him that the same Oza was neither King nor Prophete but onely a Leuite Let him looke better on his bookes and he shal finde it Howe be it I woulde not that either M. Hardinge or M. Dorman shoulde thinke that therefore they are here charged with ignorance Errours wil créepe bitwéene theire fingers be thei neuer so watcheful In the heate and drifte of writinge when the minde is wholy occupied and fully bente to the substance of the cause it is an easy mater by somme confusion one waie or other to disorder a woorde or to displace a number as to write either 9. for 6. or 24. for 42. or somme other like whiche errour though it be light in dooing yet in the reckeninge oftentimes is very greate To leaue other Examples M. Hardinge him selfe in his Confutation of the Apologie in stéede of the 22. of Luke hathe printed the 2. of Luke Likewise in his Reioinder in stéede of these woordes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath printed and sente vs quite the contrarie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In one Booke of the Newe Testamente set out at Colaine in stéede of these woordes Neque Scortatores Regnum Dei possidebunt yée shal finde it by erroure printed thus Neque Sacerdotes Regnum Dei possidebunt To be shorte M. Hardinge in this selfe same Booke in stéede of these woordes Lulled a sleepe by erroure hath printed Lulled a sheepe If al sutche childishe aduantages shoulde be taken then coulde no writer escape vncontrolled Thus good Christian Reader by the shorte Viewe of these fewe Vntruthes for so it pleaseth these menne to calle them thou maiste the better weigh the value and substance●● of the 〈◊〉 Tedious Repetitions M. Hardinges often rehearsal and doubling of one thing hath forced mee sommetime to doo the like Whiche thing good Reader if vnto thee it shal séeme ouer wearisome I praie thee to consider the occasion thereof My meaninge was onely to doo thee good To the Christian Reader IT pitieth mee in thy behalfe good Christian Reader to sée they conscience thus assaulted this daie with so contrarie Doctrines of Religion and specially if thou haue a zele to folowe and séeste not what and wouldeste faine please Eod and knoweste not howe nor findeste thée selfe sufficiently armed with Goddes Holy Sprite nor hable either to discerue thy meate from poison or to vnwinde thée selfe out of the snares For Satan transfourmeth him selfe into an Angel of Light The wicked is more watcheful and vehemente then the Godly and Falsehed is oftentimes painted and vewtified and shineth more glorious then the Truthe These be the thinges that as S. Paule saithe woorke the subuersion of the Hearers and by meane whereof as Christe saithe if it were possible the very Bsecte of God shoulde be deceiued Howe be it God knoweth his owne and no Power can pusse them out of his hande God is hable to woorke comforte out of confusion and to force his light to shine out of darkenesse Al thinges woorke vnto good vnto them that be in Christe Iesu Be Falsehed neuer so freashely coloured yet in the ende the Truthe wil conquere Notwithstandinge God in these daies hath so amazed the Aduersaries of his Gospel and hath caused them so openly and so grossely to laie abroade their folies to the sight and face of al the world that noman nowe be he neuer so ignorante can thinke he maie iustely be excused They deale not nowe so suttelly as other Heretiques in old times were woont to doo thei hide not the lothsomenesse of their errours they cloke not them selues in Shéepeskinnes they dissemble nothinge they excuse nothing but without either shame of man or feare of God they rake vp those thinges that before were buried that themselues had forsaken the wise had abhorred the worlde had lothed It had benne more policie for them to haue yeelded in sommewhat and to haue staied in the reste So there might haue appeared somme plainenesie in theire dealinges But this is Goddes iuste iudgemente that they that wilfully withstande the Truthe shoulde be geeuen ouer to mainteine Lies as beeinge the Children of Vntruthe Children that wil not heare the Lawe of God For trial whereof I beseeche thée good Reader aduisedly to peruse these fewe notes truely taken out of M. Hardinges late Confutation Iudge thereof as thou shalt sée cause Let no affection or fantasie cause thinges to séeme otherwise then they be The twoo principal Groūdes of this whole Booke are these First That the Pope although he maie erre by personal errour in his owne Priuate Iudgement as a man and as a particulare Doctour in his owne opinion yet as he is Pope as he is the Successour of Peter as he is the Vicare of Christe in Earthe and as he is the Shepheard of the Vniuersal Churche in Publique Judgement in deliberation and Definitiue Sentence he neuer erreth nor neuer erred nor neuer can erre As if he woulde saie The Pope walkinge in his Galerie is one man and fittinge in Consistorie or in Iudgemente is an other Whiche thinge to holde Alphonsus de Castro saithe it is mere folie Yet is this M. Hardinges chiefest or rather as I might in manner saie his onely grounde The Seconde is this The Churche of Rome is the whole and onely Catholique Churche of God and who so euer is not obediente vnto the same muste be iudged an ●●leretique These twoo groundes beinge once wel and surely laied he maie builde at pleasure what him listeth As for the Pope the better to countenance his estate he saithe that Peter receiued thee I beséeche thee to consider with what indifferente Iudgement M. Harding woulde haue thée to passe bitwéene vs. Firste he saithe What should wee seeke for Truthe Let vs onely beholde the custome of the Churche Againe What Argumentes what Assegations what shewe of disproufe so euer he bringe againste these thinges wee ought to make smal accoumpte thereof Againe I would blesse mee selfe from him as from the Minister of Satan and as from the Disciple of Antichriste and as from Goddes open and professed enimie Againe M. Iewelles Replie and other like Hereticol Bookes are vnlawful to be readde by order of the Churche without special licence and are vtterly forebidden to be readde or keapte vnder paine of Excommunication And againe As for the Replie none other waie wil serue but to throwe al into the fire Of the other side touching the VVoorde of God with most terrible woordes he fraieth thée from it and biddeth thee to consider of other thinges and to behold I knowe not what Yee prostitute the Scriptures he saith as Baudes doo their Harlottes to the Vngodly Vnlearned Rascal people Againe Prentises Light Personnes and the rifferaffe of the people And againe The Vnlearned people were keapte from the
be confounded Of Abailard and Almarik and certaine other your strange names wée haue no skil They are none of ours Of Iohn Hus Hierome of Prage and Berengarius and other like vertuous Learned men wée haue no cause to be ashamed Theire Doctrine standeth stil and encreaseth daily bicause it is of God But as for yours bicause it is onely of your selues therefore it falleth daily and is now forsaken the worlde through You saie that the simple namè of Secte or Heresie wherewith S. Paule was charged was not so infamous or odious in those daies and that Tertullian called the Religion of Christe a Secte or Heresie without any manner blemmishe or note of euil It was néedelesse for M. Harding to auouche Vntruthe so earnestly without cause I graunte the name of Heresie or Secte emonge the Philosophers was not infamous Cicero saithe Cato in ea Haeresi est quae nullum sequitur florem Orationis But in case of Religion it was euermore emongst al men taken in il parte and condemned and coumpted odious Touchinge S. Paule in howe good parte the Iewes called him Heretique it may easily appeare by these woordes of Tertullus his accuser Inuenimus hunc virum pestilentem mouentem seditionem omnibus Iudaeis per vniuersum orbem ac Principem Sectae Nazaraeorum We haue founde this man to be a Pestilent and a wicked felowe mouinge sedition emonge the Jewes throughout the whole worlde and a Captaine of the Heresie of the Nazareines In sutche good parte they saide vnto Christe Arte thou greater then was our Father Abraham Thou arte a false Prophete and deceiuest the People Thou arte a Samaritane and hast the Diuel The like good parte Christ promised afore hande to his Disciples They shal caste you out of theire Synagoges Ye shal be hated of al men for my names sake In sutche good parte and meaninge was S. Paule called an Heretique And so M. Hardinge bisides others your owne Doctour Nicolaus Lyra would soone haue tolde you But muche more I marueile ye should so vnaduisedly saye that Tertullian called the Christian people a Secte or Heresie in good parte and as you saye without any blemishe or note of euil For the same Tertullian in the same Apologie saithe the Heathens commonly called the Christians Incestos Homicidas Infanticidas Sacrilegos Pessimos Nocentissimos Publicum odium Hostes humani generis Omnium Scelerum reos Deorum Imporatorum Legum Morum Naturae totius inimicos Aduouterours against kinde Mankillers killers of Children Churcherobbers moste wicked moste husteful the publique hatred the enemies of Mankinde guiltie of al kinde of wickednesse Enimies against the Goddes against the Emperours against the Lawes against good order against Nature it selfe Where so euer they sawe them they made an outcrie vpon them Christianos ad Leonem Non licet esse Christianos Haue these Christians to the Lion It is not lawful these Christians shoulde liue So S. Augustine saithe Factum est vulgi Prouerbium Pluuia defecit cause Christianorum It is nowe become a common Prouerbe emonge the people our raine faileth vs bicause of these Christians So Eusebius saithe the Religion of Christe was called Impiorum Christianorum Haeresis The Heresie of the Godlesse Christians These woordes M. Hardinge I trowe were neuer vttered without al manner blemishe and note of euil S. Hierome saithe Quod magis mirum sit etiam illud de Actibus Apostolorum videtur esse relegendum Fidem nostram in Christum Ecclesiasticā Disciplinā iam tunc à peruersis hominibus Haeresim nuncupatam And that wee maye the more marueile wee maye once againe reade this place of the Actes of the Apostles where we finde that the Christian Faithe and Ecclesiastical Discipline was euen then of wicked menne called on Heresie Euen as rightly M. Hardinge and vpon as good groundes you haue againe this daye condemned the same Gospel of Christe and in ans good parte meaninge haue called it Heresie But wée maye truely and simply saye with S. Paule Accordinge to this Secte whiche you calle Heresie wee woorship the God of our Fathers whiche is the Father of our Lorde Iesus Christe The Apologie Cap. 8. Diuision 1. But the more sore and outragious a crime Heresie is the more it ought to be proued by plaine stronge argumentes especially in this time when menne beginne to geue lesse credite to theire woordes to make more diligent searche of their Doctrine then thei were wonte to doo For the people of God are otherwise instructed nowe then they were in times paste when al the Bishoppes of Romes Saieinges were allowed for Gospel and when al Religion did depende onely vpon theire Authoritie Nowe a dayes the Holy Scripture is abroade the writinges of the Apostles and Prophetes are in Printe whereby al Truthe and Catholique Doctrine maye be prooued and al Heresie maye be disproued and confuted M. Hardinge VVhere ye require your Heresie for so muche as it is so hainous a crime by plaine and stronge are gumentes to be prooued it is not vnfoowen how sufficiently and substantially that is perfoormed already by men of excellent learninge as wel of this age as of times paste VVas not Berengarius the first Author of your Sacramentarie Heresie by most plaine and stronge argumentes confuted of Lanfrancus B. of Canturbury and Guinundus B. of Auersa VVere not the Peterbrusians so whose Heresie ye holde against the Blessed Sacrifice of the Masse of the learned Abbot Petrus Cluniaccensis VVas not VVicklef so of Thomas VValden a learned man of Englande hathe not Luther and Oeclampadius benne so confuted in our time of that Holy and learned Father Bishop Fisher But whatshal I speake of particular men were they newer so excellent by whome they haue benne confuted sithe by Publike sentence of the Churche they haue bene condemned bothe in General and Prouincial Councels Therefore we thinke it not noede no we againe to prooue your doctrine so sufficiently condemnèd to be Heresie That the people be no we otherwise instructed then they were in times paste we confesse But whether better nowe then in our Forefathers dayes they that can consider the liues of them no we and of them that were then maye easily Indge The saieinges of the Bishop of Rome were neuer allowed for the Gospel His priuate sayinges and common talke might be erroneous notesse then other mennes But what he saith by waie of iudgement and sentence definitiue in doubteful pointes touchinge Religion suche saieinges of Peters successour for whome Christe prayed that his Faithe might not faile and who was commaunded by Christe to strengthen his Brethren we take for Truthe and the same obediently receiue So the Fathers assembled in Councel at Chalcedon receiued and agreed to the sayinge and writinge of Pope Leo nolesse then if Peter the Apostle and firste Bishop of Rome him selfe had spoken The Popes auctoritie we acknowledge
Facilè patior vt quae Christus nobis dedit Salutis adiumenta eorum vsus Necessarius dicatur quando scilicet datur facultas Quanquam Semper admonendi sunt Fideles non aliam esse cuiusuis Sacramenti Necessitatem quàm Instrumentalis Causae cui nequaquam alliganda est Dei vittus Vocem sanè illam nemo pius est qui non toto pectore exhorreat Sacramenta res esse Superfluas I can wel suffer that what so euer healpes of Saluation Christe hath geuen vs the vse thereof be coumpted Necessarie I meane when we maye haue oportunitie and time to vse them How be it thus mutche the faitheful muste be warned that the Necessitie of any Sacramente is none otherwise but as of a Cause Instrumental vnto whiche Cause wee maye not in any wise binde the Power of God But that the Sacramentes be thinges Superfluous no Godly man can abide to heare it Where you further charge M. Caluine for saieinge The Children of the Faithful are borne Holy ye shoulde rather herewith haue charged S. Paule For thus he saithe Nunc Liberi vestri Sancti sunt Nowe are your children Holy Ye should haue remembred M. Hardinge that these be S. Paules woordes and not M. Caluines His meaninge is that the Children of the Faitheful notwithstandinge by Nature they be the Children of Anger yet by Goddes Frée Election they be Pure and Holy This is S. Paules vndoubted Doctrine Whiche notwithstandinge be neuer neither despised the Sacramentes of Christe nor leadde the people ▪ as you saie to Mahomete or Epicure Here at the laste M. Hardinge to returne as he saithe to his Keies first beginneth with the spiteful woordes and scorneful scoffes and light Sprite of Sir Defender whiche he saithe he learned in the Schoole of Sathan nowe lieth bounds in Sathans fetters To answeare al s●tche M. Hardinges vanities it were but vaine Wise menne wil not greatly weigh these childishe Tragedies But he saithe The Prieste holdeth a Consistorie is a Iudge ouer the sinnes of the People But beinge a Iudge he cannot discerne Sinnes onlesse he knowe them Neither can he knowe them but by Confession Therfore saithe M. Harding VVee tel them that Confession of al Deadly Sinnes is of the Institution of God and not of Man Mary he saithe touchinge the manner of Confession secretely to the Priest alone it is moste agréeable to Natural Reason that secrete Sinnes be Confessed secretely Here I beseche thée good Christian Reader note this one thinge by the waye M. Hardinge contrarie to common order hathe brought vs the Institution of God without any manner Woorde of God And thus he saithe Wee tel them as if his bare tellinge should stande for proufe Verily notwithstandinge Christe gaue his Apostles Power of Bindinge and Loosing yet it appeareth not y● he spake any one woord of Secrete Confession And Gratian a Famouse Doctour of that side doubteth not to saye Latentia peccata non probantur Necessariò Sacerdoti Confitenda It is not proued that Priuie sinnes ought of Necessitie to be Confessed vnto the Prieste And againe Datur intelligi quòd etiam ore tacente Veniam Consequi possumus Wee are geuen to vnderstande that although wee vtter nothing vvith our mouthe yet wee may obteine pardonne or Absolution of our sinnes Therefore notwithstanding al this M. Hardinges tellinge his owne Doctour Gratian telleth him that Auriculare Confession is not of Goddes Institution But wherefore speaketh M. Hardinge so precisely and specially of Deadly Sinnes Or why maie not his Venial Sinnes comme likewise in the rekeninge as wel as others In déede it is specially prouided in y● late Chapter at Tridente that Litle Petite Sinnes néede not to be vttered in Confession And Rob. Holcote saithe De Venialibus Confiteri magis est Supererogationis quàm Necessitatis To make Confession of Venial Sinnes is more of Deuotion then of Necessitie And Thomas of Aquine saithe Quidam probabiliter dicunt quòd per ingressum Ecclesiae Consecratae homo cōsequitur Remissionem peccatorū Venialium Somme saie and that not without good reason that a man maye obteine Remission of his Venial Sinnes onely by entri● into a Churche that is Consecrate And it is pourposely noted in the Glose vpō the Decretales Venialia tolluntur vel per Orationem Dominicā vel per Aquam Benedictam Venial Sinnes may be remoued either by a Pater noster or by Holy Water And therefore perhaps M. Hardinge wil saie accordinge to the iudgemente of these and others his owne Doctours that his Litle Prety Venial Sinnes ought not of dewtie to be rekened but maie otherwise be remitted and haue no neede of Christes Bloude This is a shorter waie to Heauen then either Christe or his Apostles euer taught vs. Howe be it al this errour séemeth firste to haue growen of mistakinge these woordes of Beda Coaequalibus quotidiana Leuia grauiora verò Sacerdoti Pandamus Let vs open our smal and daily Sinnes vnto our felowes and our greate Sinnes vnto the Prieste For the reste M. Hardinges Resolution maie stande withe good fauoure For séeing his Auricular Confession can holde no better by Diuinitie that it may séeme to holde by somme what he did wel to saye It holdeth wel by Natural Reason M. Hardinge saithe The Prieste can be no Iudge without particulare knowledge of euery Sinne Nor can he knowe without hearing Nor can he heare without Confession For answeare hereto Chrysostome saithe as he is before alleged Medicinae locus hic est non Iudicij Non Poenas sed Peccatorum Remissionem tribuens Deo Soli die Peccatum tuum Here is a place of Medicine and not of Iudgemente rendring not punishement but Remission of Sinnes Open thine offences to God Onely But if the Prieste can be no Iudge without knowledge then doubtelesse M. Hardinge your Priestes for the more parte can be no Iudges For your owne Peter Lombarde saithe Scientiam discernendi Omnes Sacerdotes non habent Al Priestes haue not knowledge to discerne bitwene sinne and sinne And many of them be vtterly ignorant and knowe nothinge Notwithstandinge be the Prieste neuer so wise or wel learned yet howe is be hable to enter into the breaste of man and to knowe the Secretes of the harte S. Paule saithe What man knoweth what is in man but the sprite of man that is within him Salomon saithe God Onely knoweth the thoughtes of menne S. Paule saithe God Onely searcheth the Harte and reines And S. Augustine pourposely speakinge hereof as it is saide before saithe thus Vnde sciunt cùm à me ipso de me ipso audiunt an verum dicam Howe knowe they when they heare me speake of mee selfe whether I saie Truthe or no Therefore the Prieste iudginge that y● he cannot knowmuste néedes wander vncertainely and be a very doubteful Iudge Neuerthelesse admittinge the Prieste to be a Iudge yet if it may be proued either that he
the Councel greater then y● Pope And your owne Panormitane saithe as it is alleged before Papa tenetur confiteri in illo actu Sacerdos est Maior illo The Pope is bound to make his Confession and in so dooinge the Prieste is aboue the Pope Againe he saithe Papa non potest cogere Sacerdotem vt reuelet Cōfessionem quia in illo actu Sacerdos est Maior quàm Papa Children knowe that Faithe and Confession are Spiritual Causes and not Temporal Ye sée therefore M. Hardinge by the Iudgemente of your owne Doctoures that the Pope maie haue a Superioure euen in Spiritual causes Nowe let vs weighe the greate force of your Reason Thus you saie The Pope sitteth in Peters Chaire Ergo in Spiritual Causes he can haue no Superioure Who taught you thus to piece your Arguments What Childe what Sophister woulde so reason Who euer gaue sutche Power and Vertue to Peters Chaire In Temporal maters ye saie it maie be that in one age the Pope hath acknowledged the Emperoure as Lorde of that Prouince where he liued Graceously considered It was the Popes Courtesie Humilitie no doubte but not his duetie Now be it Aaron the Highe Bishop in Israel was contented to submit him selfe to Moses and of duetie to calle him Lorde Tertullian saith thus Colimus Imperatorem vt hominem à Deo secundum Solo Deo Minorem Sic enim Imperator Omnibus Maior est dum Solo vero Deo Minor est Wee honoure the Emperours Maiestie as a man nexte vnto God For so is the Emperoure greater then Al menne while he is leasse then onely the True God Origen saithe Petrus Iohannes nihil habebant quod Caesari redderent Dixit enim Petrus Aurum Argenium non habeo Qui hoc non habet nec Caesari habet quod reddat nec vnde Sublimioribus Potestatibus subiaceat Qui verò habet Pecuniā aut Possessiones aut aliquid in hoc saeculo audiat Omnis anima Potestatibus Sublimioribus subiaceat Peter and Iohn had nothing to geue vnto the Emperoure For Peter saide Golde and Siluer I haue none whiche who so hath not hath nothing to geeue to Caesar not wherein he shoulde be subiecte to the Higher Powers But who so euer hath either Monie or Landes or any thinge in this worlde let him heare what S. Paule saith Let euery soule submit it selfe to the Higher Powers And for proufe of the practise hereof Pope Leo thus submitteth him selfe humbly vnto Levves the Emperoure Nos si incomperenter aliquid egimus in Subditis iustae Legis tramitem non conseruauimus vestro admissorum nostrorū cuncta volumus emendare iudicio If wee haue donne any thinge disorderly and ouer our Subiectes haue not keapte the dewe trade and course of Lawe by your Maiesties Iudgemente vve vvil redresse al our faultes So likewise long before Pope Leo Pope Gregorie wrote vnto the Emperoure Mauritius Ecce per me Seruum vltimum suum vestrum respondebit Christus Sacerdotes meos manui tuae commisi c. Ego quidem vestrae iussioni subiectus Legem vestrā per diuersas terrarum partes trāsmitti feci Behold thus wil Christe answeare you by me beinge both his and your most humble Seruante I haue committed my Priestes vnto thy hand As for my parte I being subiecte vnto youre Maiesties Commaundemente haue caused your Order to be proclaimed through diuers partes of the worlde Againe he saithe Christus dominari Imperatorem non solùm Militibus sed etiam Sacerdotibus concessit Christe hath geuen power vnto the Emperoure to beare rule not onely ouer souldiers but also ouer Priestes Againe he saithe Et Imperatori obedientiam praebui pro Deo quod sensi minimè tacni I haue shewed my duetie towardes my Lorde the Emperoure and touchinge God I haue not conceled what I thought And this is it that S. Paule saithe ●et euery soule be subiecte to the Higher Powers Vpon whiche woordes S. Chrysostome saithe Etiamsi sis Apostolus etiamsi Euangelista etiamsi Propheta fiue quisquis tādem fueris Neque enim Pietatem subuertit ista Subiectio Thoughe thou be an Apostle though thou be an Euangelist though thou be a Prophete or what one so euer els thou be yet be thou subiecte to the Heigher Powers For this Subiection is no hinderance to Godlinesse But afterwarde the Popes beganne to looke alofte bothe to saie them selues also to cause others theire parasites to saie Romanus pontifex supra Reges in Temporalibus The Bishop of Rome is aboue Kinges euen in thinges Temporal Againe Papa totius orbis obtinet potestatem The Pope hath the power of al the worlde Againe Solus Papa est verus Dominus Temporalium Onely the Pope is the very true Lorde of Temporal thinges And againe Omnis potestes secularis immediatè data est Papae Al manner Temporal Povver is geuen immediately to the Pope Ye saie Pope Gregorie might cal the Emperoure Mauritius his Lorde not of deutie but either of Custome or of Courtesie Yet saie you further our holy Father Pope Pius the Fourth shal not now be bound to do the like Here I beseech you M. Hardinge What strange kinde of Spiritual Povver hath Pope Pius nowe g●ttē that was not before in Pope Gregorie what Learninge what Vertue what Woorthinesse what Holynesse What good reason cā ye allege wherefore Christe and his Apostles and al other Holy Fathers and Martyrs shoulde be Subiect● to the Prince and onely your late Popes and Cardinales shoulde stande so frèe Ye saie This Custome hath longe sithence benne discontinewed And in one age the Pope maie acknowledge the Emperour as the Lorde of the Land where he dwelleth and in an other age he maie be Lorde thereof him selfe That is to saie In one age the Pope maie be subiecte to the Emperoure and in an other age the Emperoure maie be subiecte to the Pope This is your whole and onely reason Thus wée see your obedience towardes your Prince goeth not by Goddes VVoorde but onely by Ages Therefore wée maie saie to you as S. Hilarie sommetime saide to y● Arian Heretiques Fides temporum est non Euangeliorum Your Faithe passeth by Ages and not by Gospels And yet it is written Veritas Domini manet in Aeternum The Truth of our Lorde endureth not for one age or other but for Euer It were a highe pointe of Learning for an Astronomer skilfully to Prognosticate betwéene y● Emperour and the Pope whether of them shoulde be Dominus Anni How be it here maie I wel and iustly answeare you with these woordes of S. Bernarde Omnis anima potestatibus sublimioribus subdita sit Si omnis vestra Quis vos excepit ab vniuersitate Si quis tentat Excipere conatur Decipere Noli illorum acquiescere consilijs qui cùm sint Christiani Christi tamen vel sequi facta vel
then the other Thus he saith Nunquid nō cùm se Antichristus veniens Deum dixerit friuolum vald● erit Sed ramen nimis perniciosum Si quantitatem vocis attendimus Duae sunt Syllabae si pondus iniquitatis Vniuersa pernicies When Antichriste shal comme and cal him selfe God shal it not be a very trifle Yet shal it be marueilous hurteful to the Churche If ye weigh the quantitie of the woorde it standeth in twoo Syllables If ye consider the weight of the wickednesse it is an Vniuersal destruction These are no Lies as it liketh you to calle them M. Harding They are very plaine woordes it is the vndoubted meaninge of S. Gregorie And therefore he calleth this claime of Vniuersal Povver a Superstitio●●s a Profane an Vngodly a Wicked title a name of Hypocrisie a name of Blasphemie To auoide these Authorities beinge so pregnāt so cleare ye are faine to tansie sundrie prety shiftes sutche as neither Iohn nor Gregorie was euer hable to vnderstande Firste ye saie This Iohn the Bishop of Constantinople meante by this title vtterly to disgrade al Bishoppes and Patriarkes what so euer and to make him selfe the Onely Bishop of al the world It is a childish laboure to seeke a knotte in a russhe to imagine doubtes where the case is cleare It is certaine that the Bishop of Constantinople meante none other Vniuersal Authoritie then that now is claimed by the Pope Therefore it is thus noted in the Booke called Chronicon Eusebij Institntum fuit vt Romana Ecclesia Caput esset Ecclesiarum omnium cùm priùs Constantinopolitana id vsurpare tentasset Order was taken that the Churche of Rome should be the Head of al Churches whereas before the Churche of Constantinople had attempted to Vsurpe the same Whiche thinge is also noted by Matthias Palmerius of Florence that without any manner difference or change of woordes Sabellicus saithe Bonifaciusz egit ab initio administrationis suae cum Phoca vt Romana Ecclesia esset omniū aliarum Caput Estque id aegrè nec sine multa contentione Apostolicae Sedi datum Graeci id ad se decus trahentes ibi Christianae Pietatis Arcem esse oportere aiebant vbi Imperij Bonifacius the thirde at the firste enitre into his office was an earneste suiter vnto the Emperoure Phocas that the Churche of Rome might be the Heade of al other Churches Whiche thinge hardely and with greate laboure was graunted to the Apostolique See of Rome The Grecians drawinge the same honoure vnto them selues saide It was necessarie the Heade of Christian Religion shoulde be there where as was the Heade of the Empiere whiche was at Constantinople Likewise writeth Vrspergensis At the requeste and suite of Pope Boniface Phocas the Emperoure appointed the See of the Apostolique Churche of Rome to be the Heade of al Churches For before that time the Churche of Constantinople wrote her selfe the First or Chiefe of al others By these it maie appeare M. Hardinge it was greate folie for you thus to ca●●●l at the name For the Power and Iurisdiction then claimed by the Bishop of Constantinople and afterwarde vsurped by the Bishoppes of Rome ▪ was al one Therefore S. Gregorie saithe to Iohn the Bishop of Constantinople Tu quid Christo Vniuersalis Ecclesiae Capiti in Extremi Iudicij dicturus es examine qui Cuncta cius membra tibimet conaris Vniuersalis appellatione supponere What answeare wilte thou make at the trial of the Laste Judgement vnto Christe the Head of the Vniuersal Churche whiche thus by the name of Vniuersal Bishop seekeste to make al his Members subiecte vnto thee Euen the selfe same Vniuersal povver claimeth nowe the Bishop of Rome and séeketh to make al other Bishoppes through the world and the whole Vniuersal Churche of Christe thral and subiecte vnto him The Bishoppes of Constantinople felle sommetimes into Heresies were deceiued But Christe hath praied for Peter that his Faithe shoulde not faise Ergo saie you The Bishop of Rome can neuer possibly be deceiued O M. Hardinge let shame once force you to refraine these Vanities I doubte not but hereafter in place conuenient I shal be hable to shewe that there haue benne mee Heretiques placed in S. Peters Chaire euē in the See of Rome then you are hable to finde in any one Sée within Europe Verily S. Gregories reason touching the danger Confusion of the Churche weigheth nomore againste the Bishop of Constantinople then againste the Bishop of Rome For thus he saithe If he that is called the Vniuersal Bishop happen to erre then needes must y● who le Vniuersal Churche fal togeather with him into Erroure And therefore if ye had perused the Councel of Basile ye shoulde haue founde this selfe same reason alleged there not againste the Bishop of Constantinople but against the Pride and Arrogancie of the Bishop of Rome The woordes be these Alioqui errante Pontifice sicut saepè contigit contingere potest to●a erraret Ecclesia Otherwise when so euer the Pope erreth as he hath often erred and maie erre againe the vvhole Churche should erre with him Thus wrote the Bishoppes and by your owne Iudgemente Catholike Bishoppes in the Councel of Basile yet had they not forgotten the Praier that Christe made for S. Peter And therefore Franciscus Zarabella a notable Canoniste and Cardinal of the Churche of Rome seeinge the greate enormities that grewe hereof saithe thus Papae faciunt quicquid libet etiam illicita sunt plusquam Deus Ex hoc infiniti sequuti sunt errores Quia papa occupauit omnia iura inferiorum Ecclesiarum ita vt inferiores Praelati fint pro nihilo Et nisi Deus succurrat statui Ecclesiae Vniuersalis Ecclesia periclitatur The Popes doo now what so euer they liste to doo yea although it be vnlawfultand are becomme more then God Hereof haue folowed infinite Erroures For the Pope hath inuaded and entred vpon al the right of the Inferioure Churches so that the inferiour Bishoppes maie goe for nought And onlesse God healpe the state of the Churche the Vniuersal Churche is in danger Thus hitherto M. Harding ye haue founde no lie Nowe where ye woulde seeme to saie Gregorie so reproued the Bishop of Constantinople that neuerthelesse he claimed y● same Title Vniuersal Authoritie to him selfe maie it therefore please you herein to stand to y● Iudgemēt of S. Gregorie him selfe of whō I recken ye doo not doubte but he vnderstood his owne meaninge Doubtelesse if ye had so diligentely considered S. Gregorie as ye beare vs in hande ye should haue found that touchinge any his owne right herein he Disclaimeth this Title refuseth it vtterly For so he writeth to y● Emperour Mauritius Nunquid ego in hac re pijssime Domine propriam causam defend O my moste Graceouse Lord doo I herein quarrel for myne owne right Againe he
determinations of Councels be referred to the Pope Christes Vicare in Earthe onlesse ye vtter suche vnreuerent and prophane scoffes It had become a wicked Celsus a Porphyrius a Iulian thus to talke rather then any Christian Hickescorner You should at leste haue looked on your square Cappe and your white rochet if you haue any if nothinge els they woulde haue tolde you that suche prophane lightnesse became not your person Concerninge the pointe it selfe you touche although the Pope haue that Priuiledge whiche Christe ‡ ‡ praied to his Father for to be geuen vnto Peter as beinge Peters Successour that his ‡ Faith faile not and that be confirme his Brethren and therefore be an ‡ assured iudge in matters of Faithe yet this notwithstandinge councels be not assembled togeather in vaine For the Fathers of the Councell doo helpe the Faithe and Doctrine of the highest Pastour VVherefore in the firste councell at Ierusalem when as a greate question rose and Peter had saide his iudgement not propped with any testimonie of the Holy Scriptures Iames approued it addinge thereto the testimonies of the Prophetes For Gods prouidence so tendereth the Churche that the chiefe members though they depende of the ‡ Head yet defende and healpe the Head VVherefore Seda admonisheth discretely that Paule conferred the Gospel which he had Preached amongest the Gentiles with the other Apostles seekinge warely to be resolued whether he Preached rightly of the ceassinge of the obseruances of the Lawe Not that he doubted ought thereof himselfe saithe he but that the mindes of them that were in doubte might be confirmed by the Auctoritie of that Apostolike Councell To that you alleage secondly as a greate inconuenience wee tell you that forasmuch as the Pope is at euery generall Councell laufully assembled either in person as sundry Popes haue benne or by his Legates neither it is an vnlaufull dealinge nor suche tossinge as you terme it matters maturely debated in the Councell to be referred to the Pope head of the Councell not so muche for a newe triall as for finall confirmation The Fathers of the Nicene councell besought S. Syluestes● that what they had ordeined he would confirme and ratifie And Leo what thinges the Councell of Chalcedon had decreed touchinge matters of faithe saithe that he approueth them And the Councel it selfe speakinge to Leo saithe thus Decretis tuis nostrum honora Iudicium VVith thy Decrees honour our Iudgement Likewise the Fathers of other councels required their constitutions to be strengthened by confirmation of the Popes auctoritie And sir finde you faulte with the Pope because he hath not yet put in his answeare I praie you who accused him VVhere when and whereof In what laufull Courte Before what laufull Iudge O you saie he hath not yet put in his answeare Be it that Hicke Hob and Hans of your sectes haue impudently accused him How would ye haue him bringe in his answere To what seate of iudgmente to what Consistorie can ye cite him that is by Christe appointed to be the Supreme iudge of all his Churche ▪ the Sheepeherde of all his Flo●ke It is not for him you know to bringe in his answere in VVeshminster Haull nor in Sterre Chamber VVill ye haue him appeare before your high Commissioners in the longe Chappell at Powles or in M. Crindalles chamber thereby where ye haue saide and donne your pleasure and depriued many honest menne of their benefices Or will ye rather haue him come to Geneua to Zurich to Frankforde to Strasburg to VVittenberg or to some other corner where ye haue your congregations there to be iudged by Iacke and Gille I pitie you poore soules that yee talke thus so farre out of square and woulde the Pope to bringe in his answeare ye knowe not where hauinge neither iuste Courte or Consistorie to call him vnto nor laufull iudge nor lawe to passe vpon him For through your Schismes and Heresies as ye haue made your selues Churchelesse Christlesse and Godlesse so also Courtlesse Iudgelesse and Lawlesse I can not compare you better then to the Rebelles of Northfolke vnder Captaine Kete amongest whom Mount Surrey was their London and an Oke or an Elme commonly called the tree of Reformation was their VVestminster Halle Suche Prince such Dominion such Iudge such Consistorie Ye complaine the Pope hath condemned you without iudgement by order pronounced and before yee were euer called to be iudged This is as true as that the Murderer or Theefe answeareth the Iudge at the barre saieinge not gilty my Lorde Ye haue benne sundry times called to laufull Consistories to Synodes to Councels Alwaies either ye made not your appearance or by right of safeconduct conueyed your selues away without any shewe of Obedience or vpon promise of amendement you were dimissed How many Legates and Nuncios haue sundry Popes sente into Germanie and other Prouinces to conuent you to heare you to moue you to a better minde and call you home and with all mercifull meanes to gather you againe into the lappe of the Churche He may saye to your condemnation that was saide of the Iewes what is that Iought to haue donne to my Vineyarde whiche I haue not donne But all was in vaine such hathe benne your stubbournesse The B. of Sarisburie Wée ieste not at Goddes Holy sprite M. Hardinge Wée know it is the same Sprite of VVisedome that hath renewed the face of the worlde discouered the multitude of your folies But wel maie wée ieste at your vnhandsome and open legierdumaine that so vainely seeke to blinde vs with a painted shadowe of the Sprite of God Yée pretende longe Praiers mutche Fastinge great conference of Doctours and Scriptures and the vndoubted presence and assistance of Goddes Holy Sprite in al your dooinges yet openly striue against y● manifest VVoorde and Sprite of God and folowe onely your owne Sprite whiche wee maie truely calle the Sprite of Vanitie The Sprite that you meane is nothinge els but the Sprite of Rome whiche you saie is the Sprite of Truthe cannot erre In one of your late Councelles holden in Rome as yée were singinge Veni Creator Spiritus God sente downe an Owle from the toppe of the Churche to sitte emongest you that the worlde might knowe in what sprite yée were assembled Elias the Prophete of God iested thus at y● Priestes of Baal Crie out alowde It is your God Either he is occupied in somme talke or he is in his Inne or he is trauailinge vpon y● waie or els perhaps he is a sleepe Yet neither was Elias an Hicke Scorner nor iested he at Goddes Holy sprite nor did he any thinge y● was vnséemely for his personne As for your Councelles whether they be al and euermore summoned by the Sprite of God or no it maie wel be doubted The Vniuersitie of Parise thus protested by waie of Appeale againste Pope Leo. 10. his Councel
Sacerdos dicitur in Psalmo The Firstborne were not Priestes in Office and Dignitie as Aaron was notwithstanding in case of necessitie and for lacke of Priestes they did somme parte of the Priestes Office as that Moses anointed or Consecrated Aaron for whiche thinge Moses in the Psalme is called a Prieste This M. Hardinge is that Fundation that must néedes beare the burthen of your whole Churche of Rome The Pope yée saie muste be a Kinge bicause Moses was bothe Prince and Priest And yet your own Felowes saie Moses by Office and Dignitie vvas neuer Prieste Yée saie The Pope being a Bishop maie be a Kinge But of the other side a King maie in no wise be a Bishop thus either vnwitingely or willingly yée seeme to ouerthrowe your owne Position For the Example that yée grounde vpon of Aaron and Moses proueth quite the contrarie For Moses being a Prince did also the Office of a Bishop But Aaron beinge the Bishop did neuer the Office of a Prince Therefore hereof yée might better Conclude the a Prince maie be a Bishop But a Bishop maie not be a Kinge Streighten your boltes therefore M. Harding shaue thē better before yée so suddainely I wil not saie so rudely shoote them from you Neuerthelesse yée saie the Priesthoode whiche is the more maie conteine the Kingedome beinge y● lesse In this respecte I trowe your Glose as it is said before compareth the Pope to the Sonne and the Emperoure to the Moone findeth out substantially by good Geometrical Proportion that the Pope is iust seuen and fiftie times greater then the Emperour How be it your owne Doctours saie as I haue likewise shewed before that in the Lavve of Moses the Prince was greater then the Prieste That ye allege of the Priesthoode and Kingedome of Christe serueth you to smal purpose For I beseche you what Crovvne what Scepter what Svverde bare Christe What Ecclesiastical Priesthoode had he but onely that he executed vpon the Crosse Verily touching any Ciuile shewe or outward Office as he was no Kinge so was he no Prieste As he said My Kingdome is not of this world So might he also haue said My Priesthoode is not of this vvorld Otherwise he was bothe King Priest in Power Vertue but not apparētly in outward office One of your Felowes saithe thus Pater per Sanctos Expositores quòd Christus non habuit in Temporalibus Authoritatem vel Iudicium Sed dare potuit dare habuit Virtutis Documentum It appeareth by the Holy Expositours that Christe had neither Authoritie nor Iudgemente in thinges Temporal But he coulde bothe geeue and had to geeue Instructions of Vertue As for these twoo woordes of S. Peter Yee are a Kingely Priesthoode yée woulde not haue alleged them to this pourpose had yée not benne in your dreame For thinke you that S. Peter called the whole Body of the Churche of Christe a Kingely Priesthoode for that you fansie your Pope to be togeather bothe Priest and Kinge Certainely the Churche of God was a Kingely Priesthoode before either the Churche of Rome was a Churche or the Pope of Rome was a Pope Yee should haue somme care to deale more reuerently with the VVoorde of God For it is Holy S. Peters meaninge is this that euery Faithful Christian man is now after a Spiritual or Ghostly meaning not onely a Prieste but also a King and therefore he calleth the whole Churche a Kingely Priesthoode Tertullian saithe thus Nónne Laici Sacerdotes sumus Regnum quoqque nos Sacerdotes Deo Patri suo fecit And wee that be Laiemen are wee not Priestes Truly Christe hath made euen vs a kingdome and Priestes vnto his Father S. Augustine saith Hoc Sacerdotio Regali consecrantur omnes pertinentes ad Corpus Christi Summi Veri Principis Sacerdotum With this Roial Priesthoode al thei are consecrate that perteine to the Body of Christe whiche is the high and true Prince of Priestes Againe he saith Omnes sunt Sacerdotes quia Membra sunt vnius Sacerdotis Al be Priestes because thei are the Members of one Prieste S. Ambrose saith Omnes Filij Ecclesiae Sacerdotes sunt Al the Children of the Churche be Priestes S. Hierome saithe Genus Sacerdotale Regale sumus omnes qui Baptizati in Christo Christi censemur Nomine Al we are that Priestely and Kingely Kinred that beinge Baptized in Christe are called Christians by the name of Christe Chrysostome saith Et tu in Baptismo Rex efficeris Sacerdos Propheta Euen thou in thy Baptisme art made both a King and a Prieste and a Prophete Nowe M. Hardinge let vs take the vlewe of youre Priestely Conclusions Moses once did one parte of the Bishoppes Office to Consecrate Aaron his children that ▪ neuer at any time els ▪ neither after nor before Christ Rath a Spiritual Priesthoode a Spiritual Kingdome for otherwise Ordinarie Priesthood and Earthely Kingedome he had none S. Peter calleth the whole Churche of Christe a Kingely Priesthoode Ergo saie you The Pope beareth bothe the Office of a Prieste and also the Righte and State of an Earthly Kinge To dissemble al other the fonde weakenesse of these folies Christe him selfe saith to the Pope and to al other Priestes and Bishoppes The Kinges of Nations rule ouer them and they that are greate exercise Authoritie ouer the people But it shal not be so emongest you S. Cyprian saithe as he is alleged by Gratian Christus actibus proprijs Dignitatibus distinctis officia Potestatis vtriusque discreuit Christe by seueral deuties and distincte honoures hath set a difference bitweene the Offices of bothe Powers Whereupon your owne Glose saithe Hic est Argumentum quòd Papa non habet vtrunque Gladium Here is a good Argument that the Pope hath not bothe Swerdes S. Bernarde saith thus vnto Pope Eugenius Planū est quòd Apostolis interdicitur Dominatus Ergo tu tibi vsurpare aude aut Dominās Apostolatum aut Apostolicus Dominatum Planè ab alterutro prohiberis Si Vtrunque similiter habere vis perdes vtrunque Alioqui ne te putes exceptum illorum numero de quibus conqueritur Dominus dicens Ipsi regnauerunt non ex me It is plaine that Temporal Dominion is forebidden the Apostles Nowe therefore thou being Pope dare to vsurpe either the Apostleship beinge a Prince or the Princehoode beinge the successoure of the Apostles Doubtelesse from the one of them thou arte forebidden If thou wilte indifferentely haue bothe thou shalte lose bothe Otherwise thinke not thou canste bee excepted from the mimber of them of whom the Lorde complaineth Thei haue made them selues kinges and not by mee Concerninge the place of S. Peter one of your companie saithe it nothinge furthereth the Popes Kingedome Thus he saithe Sacerdotium dicitur Regale à Regno non huius mundi sed Coeli
yée continewe stil to enriche your self to heape your Reader with Vntruthes Certainely the Bishoppes in the Councel of Constantinople wrote thus in humble wise vnto the same Emperoure Theodosius Obsecramus Clementiam tuam vt quemadmodum Literis honorasti Ecclesiam quibus nos Conuocasti ita finalem Conclusionem nostrorum Decretorum corroboves sententia tua Sigillo Wee beseeche your Maiestie that as ye haue honoured the Churche by your Letters wherewith yee haue called vs togeather so it maie please you to Confirme the final Conclusion of our Decrees with your Sentence and with your Seale Further as it appeareth by your owne Allegation the same Emperoure Theodosius tooke vpon him to bounde and to limite the Catholique Faith that euen in the Body of his Ciuile Lavves whiche thing neither could he haue donne without Iudgemente nor woulde he haue donne without Authoritie But if yée ineane that by this Determination of the Emperoure Theodosius that Faithe onely shoulde be taken for Catholique that was then professed by Pope Damasus and should afterwarde be professed by others succeding in Peters Chaire then haue yée secretely conueighed vs in an other Vntruthe The place it selfe wil soone reproue you The Emperours woordes be these Cunctos populos in tali volumus Religione versari quam Diuinum Petrum Apostolum tradidisse Romanis Religio vsque nunc ab eo insinuata declarat quamque Pontificem Damasum sequi claret Petrum Alexandriae Episcopum Virum Apostolicae sanctitatis Wee wil el menne to walke in that Religion whiche Holy Peter the Apostle deliuered to the Romaines as the Faithe firste enkendled by him and stil contine wed vntil this daie dooth declare whiche Religion also it is plaine that Pope Damasus foloweth and Peter the Bishop of Alexandria a man of Apostolique holinesse Here the Emperoure Theodosius commaundeth his Subiectes to folowe as wel the Faithe of Peter the Bishop of Alexandria as of Damasus the Bishop of Rome And yet in the nexte title folowinge he openeth his owne meaning in this wise by other Eramples more at large Episcopis tradi omnes Ecclesias mox iubemus quos constabit vti Communione Nectarij Episcopi Constantinopolitanae Ecclesiae Timothei c. Wee commaunde that foorthwith the Churches be restoared to al Bishoppes of whom it shal appeare that they Communicate with Nestorius the Bishop of Constantinople or with Timotheus or sutche as shal haue felowship or agreemente in Faithe with the Bishoppes of Alexandria in Egypte and with Pelagius the Bishop of Laodicea and with Diodorus the Bishop of Tarsus in Asia and with Amphilochius the Bishop of Iconium and with Optimus the Bishop of Antioche and with Helladius the Bishop of Caesaria and with Otreius the Bishop of Melite and with Gregorius the Bishop of Nyssa and with Terennius the Bishop of Scythia and with Marmarius the Bishop of Martianopolis Euery of these seueral Bishoppes M. Hardinge by the Emperoures iudgemente in trial of the Catholique Faithe had as greate Authoritie and weighte as the Bishop of Rome But Pope Coelestinus yée saie desired Cyrillus the Bishop of Alexandria to represente his persone and to supplie his rouine in the Councel of Ephesus that is to saie to haue the Firste place in the Councel For the Firste Place in al Ecclesiastical Assemblies was alloted to the Bishop of Rome The Seconde to the Bishop of Constantinople The Thirde to y● Bishop of Alexandria The Fourth to the Bishop of Antioche The Fifthe to the Bishop of Hierusalem This packinge of places therefore bitwéene Coelestinus and Cyrillus was a Mysterie pourposely canuessed to kéepe the Bishop of Constantinople whom the Pope euermore enuied out of countenaunce For by this Policie the Bishop of Alexandria that shoulde haue had the Thirde Place was handsomely shifted into the Firste and the Bishop of Constantinople whiche in the Bishop of Romes absence shoulde haue had the Firste Place was remoued downe to the Seconde Howe be it what auaileth al this M. Hardinge to further your pourpose to proue that Councelles were summoned by the Pope Verily it appeareth not hitherto that either Coelestinus or Cyrillus or any other Bishop had any sutche Power or Authoritie to summone Councelles This is it that yée shoulde haue proued As for the Firste or Seconde Place wée moued no question Againe yée séeme to saie the Pope of righte was euermore Presidente in al Councelles This if yée knowe it is an other Vntruthe If yée knowe it not it is an erroure For it is plaine that in the Firste Councel of Nice Pope Iulius was not Presidente but Eustathius the Bishop of Antioche The Popes Legates as it is said before were placed beneath in the fourthe roume In the Fifthe Councel of Constantinople Menna the Bishop of the same Cittie was President not the Pope In the Second Ephesine Councel Dioscorus the Bishop of Alexandria was Presidente In the Seconde Councel of Carthage it seemeth Gennedius was the Presidente This Dignitie then passed not by Enheritance or by Succession as the Pope nowe woulde séeme to claime it but either by choise of the Councel or by fauoure of the Prince Thus Hosius the Bishop of Corduba in Spaine not by right of his place but for the woorthinesse of his persone was appointed Presidente in the Councel of Sardica And Athanasius speaketh of him in this wise with greate admiration Cuius non fuit ille Concilij Princeps In what Councel hath not Hosius benne the Presidente or Chiefe Yée saie Pope Syluester Christened the Emperoure Constantinus and therefore was his Spiritual Father This maie passe emonge other your Truthes For your Popes by theire Omnipotente Power maie Minister Sacramentes being deade And yet notwithstandinge al this were true M. Hardinge yet your cause thereby were litle furthereo Onlesse perhaps yée wil reason thus Pope Syluester Christened the Emperoure Ergo The Pope hathe Authoritie to Calle Councelles Howe be it onlesse this Argumente be better digested your very Sophisters of Louaine wil hardely allowe it But in déede that whole tale touchinge the Christeninge of the Emperoure Constantine is nothing els but a péeuishe fable Constantius the Emperours owne Sonne vtterly denieth that Syluester euer Baptized Constantinus his Father Eusebius saithe Constantinus was Christened not in the floorishing state of his age but onely a litle before he died not in Rome but at Nicomedia in the Kingdome of Epirus not in a corner but in the presence of many Bishoppes and as S. Hierome saithe not by Pope Syluester that then was deade but by Eusebius the Bishop of Nicomedia For proufe whereof S. Ambrose saithe Constantino in vltimis constituto Gratia Baptismatis omnia peccata dimisit The Grace of Baptisme foregaue Constantine al his sinnes euen at the ending of his life Therefore M. Hardinge wee must néedes saie that either your tale is vntrue whiche is not strange or els Constantine was twise Baptized whiche is
leafte him wee coulde not come to Christe Neither wil he nowe make any other league with vs then sutche a one as Nahas the Kinge of the Ammonites woulde haue made in times paste with them of the Cittie of Iabes whiche was to put out the Right Eie of eche one of the Inhabitantes Euen so wil the Pope plucke from vs the Holy Scripture the Gospel of our Saluation and al the Confidence whiche wee haue in Christe Iesu And vpon other condition can he not agree vpon peace with vs. M. Hardinge Ye are not fallen from the Bishop of Rome onely whiche were a damnable schisme but ye are fallen from Christes Churche Your comparison of the Pope with kinge Nahas is not very agreable But sirs ye speake more maliciously then credibly Be ye good Christen men and conforme your selues to the Catholique Faithe and denie Christe and his Gospel For this also yee shoulde haue added and I warrant you the Pope wil not plucke from you neither the Scriptures nor your confidence in Christe Iesu no more then he dooth from vs. The Apologie Cap. 20. Diuision 3. For whereas somme vse to make so greate a vaunte that the Pope is onely Peters Successour as though thereby he carried the Holy Ghoste in his bosome cannot erre this is but a mater of nothing a very trifelinge tale Gods Grace is promised to a good minde and to any one that feareth him not vnto Sees Successiōs Richesse saithe S. Hierome maie make a Bishop to be of more might then the reste but al the Bishoppes whosoeuer they be are the Successours of the Apostles If so be the Place and Consecration onely be sufficient why then Manasses Succeded Dauid and Caiphas Succeded Aaron And it hath benne often seene that an Idol hath benne placed in the Temple of God In olde time Archidamus the Lacedemonian boasted mutche of him selfe howe he came of the bloud of Hercules But one Nicostratus in this wise abated his pride Nay quod he thou seemest not to descende from Hercules For Hercules destroied euil menne and thou makest good menne euil And when the Phariseis bragged of their linage howe they were of the kinred and bloude of Abraham Ye saithe Christe seeke to kil me a manne vvhiche haue tolde you the truthe as I hearde it from God Thus Abraham neuer did Yee are of youre Father the Diuel and vvil needes obeie his vvil M. Hardinge The Pope succedeth Peter in auctoritie and power For whereas the Shepe of Christe continewe to the worldes ende he is not wise that thinketh Christe to haue made a shepeherde temporarie or for a time ouer his perpetual flocke Then what shepeherdly endoument our Lorde gaue to the firste shepeherde at the institution of the shepeherdely office of the Churche that is he vnderstanded to haue geeuen ordinarely to euery successour To Peter he gaue that he obteined by his praier made to the Father that his Faithe should not faile Againe to him he gaue grace that to performe the performance whereof at him he required to witte that he confirmed and strengthened his brethren wherefore the grace of stedfastnesse of Faithe and of confirminge the waueringe and doubtful in Faithe euery Pope obteineth of the holy Ghoste for the benefite of the Churche And so the Pope although he maie erre by personal erroure in his owne priuate iudgemente as a man and as a particular Doctour in his owne opinion yet as he is Pope the successour of Peter the Vicar of Christe in earthe the shepeherde of the vniuersal Churche in publique iudgemente in deliberation and definitiue sentence he neuer erreth nor neuer erred For when so euer he ordeineth or determineth any thinge by his highe Bishoply Auctoritie intendinge to binde Christen menne to performe or beleue the same he is alwaies gouerned and holpen with the grace and fauour of the holy Ghoste This is to Catholique Doctours a very certaintie though to sutche doughty Clerkes as ye are it is but a mater of nothinge and a very triflinge tale Gods grace in one respecte is promised bothe to a good minde and to one that feareth God and also in an other respect to the successours of Peter S. Hieromes saieinge to Euagrius whiche nowe you haue alleaged three or foure times wil not handsomly serue you for so diuerse pointes as a shipmans hose for diuerse legges Once againe I tel you thereby he meaneth nothinge els but that the greatnes of Rome ought not to geue Auctoritie to a wronge priuat custome by whiche Deacons in certaine cases were preferred before Priestes against the right generall custome of the worlde And bishoppes be the successours of the Apostles we graunte yet is the Pope the successour of Peter who was shepeherde of al Christes Lambes and shepe and therefore also of the Apostles them selues and so hath a higher auctoritie As for your example of Archidamus who boastingly fetched his petigree from Hercules you muste consider succession of vertue alwaies foloweth not succession of bloude Nowe wee do● acknowledge in the Pope a succession of shepeherdly power euen sutche as was in Peter VVhiche power is not taken awaie by lacke of Peters holines Christe likewise by his answeare to the Phariseis though he affirmed they succeded not Abraham in loue of truthe and that for their malice they were of their Father the Deuil yet ●e denied not but that they came lineally of Abraham and were of his bloud though not of his godlines Sutche succession meane not we speakinge of the Pope whose succession is deriued of Peter but the succession of power and auctoritie and of infallibilitie of Faithe in iudgemente and sentence definitiue The B. of Sarisburie Here wee haue founde one Pope with twoo Capacities In one respecte he is a Man in an other respecte he is aboue a Man but whether in that respecte he be Angel or Archangel it is paste in silence One waie he Succedeth Peter an other waie he Succedeth I knowe not whom One waie he maie Erre an other waie though he woulde neuer so faine he cannot erre In his Bed at his Table on Horsebacke or els where wee maie wel mistruste him for in these places he maie be deceiued as wel as others But in Councel in Consistorie and in place of Iudgemente it is moste certaine yee saie he cannot erre For in these places he hathe the Holy Ghoste I trowe at his Commaundemente His Povver Pastoral his Succession in Authoritie and Infallibilitie of Faithe his Place his Chaire his Consecration are sufficiente for euer to preserue him from Erroure To like pourpose Salluste sommetime saide of Cicero Aliud Stans aliud Sedens de Republica sentit While he Standeth vp he hath one minde touching the common State When he sitteth downe he hath an other Apolloes Nonne while she sate mewed in her Caue was inspired and Prophesied and gaue Oracles but after that shee came
Maister 487. Tovvardes the ende of the vvorld the people shal flee to the Scriptures 716. 721. Scriptures sufficiete to debate al doubtes 58. 59. 61. 62. 64. 69. The Scriptures of God muste be expounded by the Sprite of God 65. Searche the Scriptures 72. To selle Christe 292. Simple erroure 46. 50. A Priest maie not be deposed for simple fornication 362. 363. 364. 365. Simple fornication vvhether it bee sinne or no. 361. The Iudge of Sinne. 140. ●53 The vvorde of God forgeueth Sinnes 158. Sinne forgeuē vvithout Cousesnō 155. The Pope cannot cōmitte Simonie 560. 561. 562. 563. Vnchaste single life vvorse then aduoutrie 170. Filthines maintained vnder the color of single life 167. 168. The Prieste forgeueth not Sinne. 154. Sinnes forgeuen by hearinge the vvoorde of God 138. The frutes of single life 187. 188. 189. Singe●s 98. Spiritual eating of Christes Bodie 271 272. 274. 280. Stevves in Rome 369. 370. 371. 373. Stubbernenesse 46. 50. 590. Substance 251. ●ubstance by M. Hardinges Iudgement signifieth Accidentes 253. Succession 127. Succession not sufficient 132. Succession in Peters Chaire 727. The Succession of Popes 131. 132. Christe vvas able to shevve no succession 128. The Pope hath his holinesse by Succession 39. Certaintie of Succession Ibidem Summus Sacerdos 526. 527. Superstitious choise of meates 270. Superintendents 597. Sursum corda vsed in the time of the holy mysteries 275. T. Temple 328. Theophylacte ansvvered 239. He that entreth not by the vvoorde of God is a Theefe 102. The Popes tyrannie ouer Princes 732. Tyrannie and crueltie in the Popes 79 Freere Ticelles Proclamation 34. Traditions 195. Vaine Traditions fathered vpon the Apostles 66. Tradition is the sense of the Scripture 72. Traditions and Errours cutte of by Goddes vvoorde 67. Traditiōs equal vvith Gods vvord 195. Traditions vsed for the vvoorde of God 196. 197. Traditions broken 195. Tradition against the Scripture 65. 66 Traditions abused 66. Transubstantiation nevve and doubtful 237 238. Tridentine Coūcel referred al to the Pope 634. Truthe deuoureth falsehed 585. Truthe blinded vvith falsehed 7. The Truthe stil a stranger 9. Truth il entreated sclaundered 4. 5 Truthe vvil conquere 284. Truthe preuaileth 731. The sprite of Truthe in Annas and Caiphas 621. V. Valentinian the Emperoure refused to heare Ecclesiastical causes 667. Venial sinnes remitted other vvaies then by the bloud of Christe 151. The Pope changeth vice into vertue 564. Vigilantius 13. The Churche is the Popes Vineyard 608. The perpetual virginitie of our Lady 200. The vitious life of the Romaine Clergie 358. I vvil no more drinke of this frute of the Vine expounded 262. One vniuersal Bishop 99. 122. Vniuersal povver cōmitted no more to Peter then to Paule 124. An Vniuersitie in Rome 377. The Popes vauntinge of his vniuersal povver 125. Pope Gregorie refuseth the name of Vniuersal Bishop 124. Reasons for the Vniuersalitie of the Pope 100. 101. Vnitie a token of the Truthe 352. The Vniuersal Churche dependeth on the Pope 452. The Vniuersal church maie faile 450 Vnitie amonge the vvicked 352. The Vnitie of the Churche reasteth not in one Christe but in one Pope 100. 466. 467. Pride it selfe desireth Vnitie 100. Ministers Vnlearned 602. The Romaine clergie Vnlearned 601. 602. A Vovve simple or solemne 499. Vovve annexed vnto holy orders 171. Volusianꝰ the Bishop of Carthage 366 VV. VVater vvas not water but bloud 246 VVatches 13. VVeemen changed into men 380. VVicked men commended 421. The VVicked eate not the Body of Christe 210. 241. 273. 349. 586. The VVicked receiue the Body of Christe in vvhat sense 210. VVilful stubbernenesse 435. VVitenberg 391. A poore husbandman bringinge the VVoorde of God ought to be beleeued before Pope or Coūcel 611. The Authoritie of Gods VVoord 194 Z. Zele and griefe of minde against the enimies of God 3. FINIS 1. Timoth. 4. Roman 1. Confu fol. 334. a. Conful fol. 285. b. Confuta 324. b. Confut. 204. b. Confut. 306. b. Confut. fol 280. a. Et 305. b. Confu fol. 247. b Confu fol. 248. b. Confu fol. 178. b. Confut at Folio 178. b. Confutat Fol. 182. a. Confut. Fol. 182. b. M. Harding Fol. 340. b. M. Harding Fol. 318. b. Prouer. 8. Iohn 19. Roman 13. Dorman Fol. 15. Stanislaus Or●chouius in Ch●maera Fol. 97. M. Harding Fol. 298. a. Confuta 277. Confut. 328. a. Confuta 172. b. Reioind 314. Confut. 87. a. Confut. 269. b. Reioind 42. a. Confut. 43. a. Confut a. 269. a. 323. b. 334. a. 338. a. 348. b. Confu fol 175. a. 2. Cor. 6. Augu. in Psal 33 M. Hard. in his Answeare to the Chalenge Fol. ●08 b. Confut. 46. a. Confuta 312. b. Dorman Fol. 22. Dorman Fol. 24. Dorman in his Requeste Fol. 13. Confut. 47. a. Reioind Fol. 287. a. Reioind Fol. 287. a. 1. Corin. 6. Confut. 332. a. 2 Corin. 11. 2. Tim. 2. Matthae 24. 2. Tim. 2. Iohan. 10. Roman 8. Esai 30. M. Harding fol. 334. b. Alphons lib. 1. Cap. 4. Confu Fol. 16. b. Fol. 261. b. Reioind In 〈◊〉 Preface to 〈◊〉 Reader * iij * iiij a. * iiij b. ** ij a. Reioind In 〈◊〉 Preface to 〈◊〉 Iewel 〈◊〉 Confu● 212 〈◊〉 Reioind in 〈◊〉 Preface to 〈◊〉 Reader M Har. in his Answeare Artic. 15. Diui. 7. Hierony in Esaiam lib. 9. ca. 30. August De Tempore Sermon 145. August in quae●ion Veter Testamen quaest 43. Hilar. in Psal 1. Tertull. in Apologetico Eccles 2. The de●enders likened to Esopes Asse The vvonte of all Herctiques Heretiques likened to Apes The name and reputation of the Churche chalenged by Heretiques In epist ad Iubainū de Haereticis baptizādis De praescript haeret Contra Constantium August contra epist Parmen lib. 2. cap. 1. Bernard in cāt Sermo 66. Apostolici VVhat meane Heretiques by chalenginge vnto them the name and estimation of the Churche 2. Cor. 11. The estimation and auctoritie of the Church Lucae 10. Matth. 18. 1. Tim. 3. Ephes 1. Oseae 2. Psalm 131. Gene. ● In comment in epist ad Tir. cap. 3. The vvonte of the Gospellers being excommunicate out of the Church 1. Timot. 3. Ephes 1. Iohan. 8. Hierem. 7. Hierem. 18. De Maior Obedi vnam Sanctam Dist 22. Omnes Leo Epist 83. Ad Palaestinos Cypri De Simplicitate praela Esa● 1. Matth. 3. Matthae 23. Iohan. 8. August Lib. 2. De Sermon Dom● in monte Iohan. 5. Ephe. 1. 1. Timo. 3. Irenae Lib. 3. Cap. 11. August De vnita Eccle. Cap. 3. August in eodē Cap. Chrysostom In Opere Imperfecto Homi. 49. Chrysostom in eadem Homilia Daniel 9. Matth. 24. Iohan. 3. Prouerb 26. Numer 22. a Augustinus Steuchus de Primatu b See the fifthe parte hereof the 6. Cap. and. 15. Diuision Tertull. in Apologetico Iohan. 8. Cornel. Tacit●● Marion ex Tertul. Aelius è Lactās Euseb Li. 5. C. 11. Tertul. in Apologe Tertull. in Apolo Cap. 3. Suetonius Trāquil in Nerone 1. Corinth 11. De Vtilita Credendi ad Honoratū Lib. 1. Ca. 1. Cōfess li. 5. ca. 6. Matth.