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A00294 A booke intituled, The English Protestants recantation, in mattersof religion wherein is demonstratiuely proued, by the writings of the principall, and best learned English Protestant bishops, and doctors, and rules of their religion, published allowed, or subscribed vnto, bythem, since the comminge of our King Iames into England, that not onely all generall grownds of diuinitie, are against the[m], but in euery particular cheife question, betweene Catholicks & them, they are in errour, by their owne iudgments : diuided accordingly, into two parts, whereof the first entreateth of those generall grounds, the other of such particular controuersies, whereby will also manifestely appeare the vanitie of D. Morton Protest. Bishop of Chester his boke called Appeale, or, Ansuueare to the Catholicke authour of thebooke entituled, The Protestants apologie. Broughton, Richard. 1617 (1617) STC 10414; ESTC S2109 209,404 418

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Neither in Catholicke or Protestant proceedings can deceaue vs The Minor is proued by the very words of the Protestant Doctors before cited Therefore I will conclude with this Argument following Whatsoeuer Church or congregation graunteth so many workes and estates of perfection as before they haue recompted Pouertie Chastitie and Obedience and yet in life and execution do not practize any one of them in any condition company fraternitie or congregation in any one place or contry in so longe time as Protestancie hath Raigned but spoiled abandoned persecuted or ouerthrowne all Monasteryes howses and communities liuing in such perfection neither is nor can be the true and perfect Church and spowse of Christ but that which proceedeth in the contrary course But the Churche or congregations of Protestants are in this case as all men knowe and the Romane Catholicke Church in the contrary disposition and state Therefore the Protestant Religion is not true but onely the Catholicke How holy and Religeous this our Kingedome hath beene in this high degree of sanctitie in tymes of Catholicke Religion how many hundreds of Monasteries were fownded to such purpose how many glorious Kings Queens and Princes forsakeinge their Kingedomes Diadems and Honors haue embraced this state of perfection in chastitie pouertie and obedience and became Monkes and Nunnes may in sort be gathered out of the Protestant late Theater where you shall finde the number to greate to be cited I will onely alledge their words in one place to giue some triall of it which are these Not onely preists T●●at of gr Britan. pag. 305. n. 16. 17. and lay men vowed and performed pilgrimadges to Rome But Kings Queens and Bishops also did the like So greate a deuotion was in their harts and so holy a Reuerence held they of the place Kinge Egbert succeeded his vncle Ceolnuph in the Kingedome ruling with peace and pi●tie twentye yeares foresooke the wo●ld and shore himself a monke as diuers other Kings in those dayes had done as Inab Ethelred Kenred Sigebert Sebbi Offa Cronulph c. Some Pag. 17. 25. 37. 47. 298. 301. 308. 338. 351. 360. of the Queenes were these Q. Aelfrith Cuthburga Elemner Andrye Quinburge Eadburge Eue Segburge Ethelburge Cuthburga Oswith Kinswith Ethelwith E●fride Eanifled Erminhild Ethelswith Edgiua Elfgine with others The examples of the sonnes and daughters of Kings with such greate princes would requier a volume to giue them due remembraunce I will onely recite two or three relations from these Protestants how honorably these works of perfection with their vowes were then esteemed and how barbarous a thinge it was then to violate them They write of Kinge Etheldred in these words The remorse of conscience for the Pag. 341. n. 4 blood hee had spilt and the places of Oratoryes by him destroyed besides his Intrusions into an other mans Right strucke so deepe a wounde into Kinge Ethelreds breast that e●er hee bethought him what recompence to make First then building a goodly Monastery at Bradney and that moste fruitefull seated in the countie of Lincolne thought that not sufficient to wa● aw●●●he scarrs of his fowle offence but determined in himself to forsake the world for that was the terme attributed to the monasticall life But such was the Religion then taught and the goldy zeale of the good princes then raigneinge whose workes haue manifested their vertues to posterities and faith in Christ the saluation of their soules in whose paradise wee leaue them and Etheldred to his deuent intent who to reconcile himself first vnto Kenred bequeathed the Crowne solely to him allthough hee had a sonne capable thereof then putting on the habit of Religion became himself a monke in his owne monastery of Bradney where hee liued in a regular life the terme of twelue yeares and therin lastely died Abbot of the place when hee had raigned 30. yeares Chelred the sonne and heire apparant of this Kinge Ethelred entered into Religion when hee Pag. 341. n. 6. was of sufficient yeares to haue succeeded his Father in the Kingedome Of the miraculous victory of Kinge Osway by his vowe to dedicate his daughter to Christ in perpetuall virginitie they write in this maner Penda the mercilesse Pagan Kinge inuading Kinge Oswy refuseing all Pag. 338. n. 4. 5. Iuells and offers of peace Kinge Oswy seeketh help of God by prayer And with such zeale as was then embraced vowed his yonge daughter Elfled to be consecrated in perpetuall virginitie to him with 12 farmes and their lands to the erection and mayntenance of a monastery And his enemyes army beinge thirtye times his and of well appointed and old tryed souldyers Penda loste his life with discomfiture of all his mercian power Of Ethelwald sonne of Ethelbert Pag. 360. n. 3 thus they write He entereth now rebellion and besides the alleadgeance due to his prince in sacriledgeius maner brake the hests of holy Church in deflowring and taking a votarist to wife But fearing the Army of K. Edward bad in the night winborne which hee had taken and his Nunne adue flyeinge to the Danes in Northumberland Where wee se that this point of Protestant doctrine is by their owne sentence sacriledge a breaking of the hests of holy Churche Ioyning it self against God and contry with Rebellion and infidelitie And a thinge though vsed by Infidells yet a monster and seldome hard of amonge Christians for of those Infidell Danes they add in these words Hungar and Pag. 354. cap. 35. n. 5. Hubba began with fier and sworde to lay all waste before them spareing neither parson sexe nor age The places respected for publick good and sacred temples consecrated onely to God which all other Tyrants haue forborne the sauadge men as the earthes destroyers cast downe and trampled vnder their prophane feete amonge which for note were the goodly Monasteryes of Bradney Crowland Peterborough Ely and Huntington all layed in leuell with the grounde and their votaryes aswell the Nunnes as the Monkes murthered with their inhumane and mercilesse swords to auoide whose barbarous pollutions the chaste Nunnes of Coldingham deformed themselues to their lasciuious eyes by cutting of their vpper lipps and noses but to euerlasting remembrance they remayne moste fayre and well beseeminge faces of puer virgins Then if the glory and honor of such vowes workes of perfection their vowers votarists and professors are so greate and estimable with God and good men euen in the Iudgment of these Protestants And those that haue though but in small things in respect of these Protestants afflicted and persecuted them are worse then tyrants sauadge men earthe destroyers and prophane what is become of those Protestants that destroyed so many hundreds of holy Temples Monasteryes and places consecrated to God which all other tyrants haue forborne And what hope can be to these that lyue persisting in those stepps of their forerunners and dayly adding new and more afflictions to the sacred Preists and holy professors of that
argue againe That which was the true Church in the time of Luther within an hundred yeares by the confession of Protestants wherein as in the true Church of Christ Christianitie Baptisme Ordination and power of Ministry were receaued and which brought forth of renowned Kinges and Queenes many Saincts in heauen and many moste learned holy and ver●uous Doctors and Popes themselues and yett of that faithe which the present Church of Rome now teacheth must needs be the true Churche of Christ But the present Romane Church is such by these Protestants Therefore by them it is the true Churche of Christ The first proposition is euidently true for if as before by these Protestants there is no saluation out of the true Church so many glorious Saincts and holy ones Kinges Queenes Popes and Doctors that could not be excused by ignorance muche lesse made glorious in it could not haue gone to heauen Now supposeinge that euery Church true or false consisteth of the heade and other members of him or them that rule and those that be ruled of the shephards and sheepe Bishops Preists and those vnder their chardge Thus I proue the Minor proposition of the Church of Rome consistinge of the Pope supreame heade Bishops Doctors Preists and other members D. Feild writeth thus of this Church The Romane and Latine Church continued the true Church of God euen till Feild pag. ●2 our time Therefore why was it refused by them or how not since chaunged can it be now otherwise againe hee writeth in these words Wee doubt not but the Churche in Feild pag 182. which the Bishop of Rome exalted himselfe was notwithstanding the true Church of God that it held a saueing profession of the truthe in Christ and by force thereof conuerted many contryes from error to truthe Therefore the doctrine of it beeing truthe it must needs be the true Church Hee further acknowledgeth with D. Feild pag. 72. Couell def of Hook pag. 73. Couell and others that Luther and the rest of his Religion ●ere baptized receaued their christianitie ordination and power of Ministery in that Church as the true visible and apparant Church of Christ Hee telleth vs further that diuers of the Romane Churche euen of the best learned be Feild pag. 182. saued and Sayncts in heauen Then the vnlearned neede not feare to followe their guides goeinge before and theacheing them the way to heauen D. Willet writeth thus it is Willet Antilog pag. 144. not denyed by any Protestant but many renowned Kings and Queenes of the Romane faithe ar Saincts in heauen And speakeing of the Kings Mother that glorie of late Princes Q. Mary of Scotland Hee attributeth vnto her and her Religion that of the Romane Churche such holines and truthe that it preuailed with God not onely for herself but her same also his words be these The childe of Willet Engl pref to the K. before Antil Sutcliffe Ans to the lay pet pag. 34. such prayers and teares cannot possibly fall away D. Sutcliffe acknowledgeth the scholemen so far and famously to be Papists as they terme Catholicks that hee nameth them especially Pope Innocent the thirde Thomas Aquinas Scotus Albert Durand the most renowned in schooles particuler Agents of the Romane Church and foretops of Popery and ioyneth them in that sence with the late Doctors of the Church of Rome defendeing in their writeings the doctrine thereof Hardinge Allen Bellarmine Baronius And yett D. Couell highly speaketh in the Couell def of Hook pag. 24. praise of suche men in this maner Alexander Hales whoe made his summe that excellent worke by commaundement of Pope Innocentius the fourth was called the fowntayne of life because of that lyuely knowledge that flowed from him hee was scholler to Bonauenture a Scholler not inferior to himselfe of whome hee was wont to say that in Bonauenture hee thought Adam sinned not meaninge of that Illumination which was in him and doubtles there was much in him as though hee had not beene darkened by the fall of Adam And therefore the Church called him the Seraphicall Doctor To these Aquinas was not inferior whoe came so neare vnto S. Augustine whome in his booke Couell against Burg. against Burges hee esteemeth the cheifest Doctor that euer was or shall be excepting the Apostles that some thought hee had all his workes by hart and by a common prouerbe it was spoken that the soule of S. Augustine duelt in Aquinas in whome aboue all the rest foure contraryeties were saide to excell aboundance breuitie facilitie securitie in resp●ct whereof hee gayned the Title to be called Angelicall And to speake somewhat of our Popes themselues so odious with this people The Protestant Relator findeth much vertue deuotion and pietie in them which haue beene euen in these dayes amonge which to particular in the last Pope Clement Relation of Relig. cap. 42. 43. 8. hee writeth of him in this maner Hee did often weepe vppon pietie and godly compassion at his Masses Processions c. his eyes were still watreinge sometimes streameing with teares in so much that for weepeing hee seemed another Heraclitus Relation cap. 29. sup hee was a good Pope a good Prince a good prelate And to exclude Ignorance hee writeth thus the Papists crye maynely in all places for triall by disputation Then if our Popes be so holy so good Popes good men good Princes good Prelates our Kings and Queenes and best Learned Saincts our Pastors Doctors and Teachers that be the Popes Agents and foretops of popery moste excellent for learninge and pietie their writeings renowned their doctrine secure wee may securely followe them and as securely conclude by these Protestants that onely this Church of Rome is the true Church of Christ Lastely in this question I argue thus That which by the confession of Protestants is our mother Churches and from which no Churche ought further to seperate it selfe then it is separated from it self when it was in her best estate for true doctrine and in which shee still continueth in all things necessarie to saluation so vndoubtedly that they confesse it in plaine words to be the familye of Iesus Christ part of the howse of God and visible Church that they which liue and dye in it may be saued must needs be acknowledged by them for the true Church of Christ But the present Romane Church by these Protestants is suche And therefore by them the true Church of God The Maior proposition is euidently true for all children to which all other Churches in respect of Rome or compared ar bownde to obey their Mother especially teacheing all necessarie truth as is here supposed And that which is the Mother Church which is the highest if it be a part of the howse of God and visible Church and the familie of Iesus Christ it must needs be the moste excellent part thereof the heade and cheife and so absolutely the true Church such societies being named by the
that they are malitious against it they shall deny it to be the true Church of Christ because in his Iudgment the true and essentiall definition of the true Church euer was and still is vnseperably annexed vnto it Concerning D. Mortons exception and limitation That the error and superstition doe proceede not from knowledge but from Ignorance is fully answeared by his owne fellowes in Religion before graunteinge that the Popes greatest Doctors and Princes of our Religion ar Saints and saued soules And to auoide ignorance or willfull erringe they haue written The Papists cry mamely in all Relation of Relig. cap. 29. places for triall by disputation And that English Protestants persecutions against vs ar thought to equall those of Nero and Dioclesian Which wee would not suffer if wee knew our selues in error willfull both to be afflicted in this and the world to come Besides D. Mortons limitation is ridiculous for error and superstition doe not proceede from knowledge as his fonde distinction surmiseth neither doth the state of knowledge or ignorance ●arye the essentiall necessary and fundamentall definition nature or essence of the Church being one and the same in that as in all other things in all estates and times The particular exceptions which hee taketh against the Innouation of some doctrines which hee contendeth to haue beene in the Romane Church first ar friuolous in this dispute none of them as hee confesseth being of any thinge essentiall and necessarie either to the true Church or saluation of which wee contend in this place Secondly they shall be all confuted in their proper places by these his owne brethren and present frends and contrymen in Religion Thirdly not to suspend my Readers Iudgment so longe Doctor Morton shall answeare and by a generall Morton Appeal lib. 4. cap. 30. pag. 573. 574. reason so much as this place will permitt confute himself in his owne obiection His words be these Protestants in oppugninge doctrines which they call new and not Catholicke ar so farre from sufferinge the limitation of the first 4●0 yeares that they giue the Romanists the scope of the first 600. yeares S. Gregory liued within the first 600. yeares Hee addeth for himself and other Protestants as the Centuriarists and many more of our conuersion then in this Morton lib. 1. cap. ● pag. 60. supr maner Pagan and Heathnish people by the light of the ghospell throughe the Ministerie of Austen the legate of S. Gregory were brought vnto the folde of Christ And therefore our Authors called i● a gratious conuersion And yett that this light Ghospell fold of Christ and gratiu● conuersion to which they were conuerted was as they now scoffingly terme our Catholicke Romane Religion Romanisme Papisme Papistry superstitions Ceremonies and the like by which they expresse the full state of our Religion is thus testified by D. Mortons Protestant Authors and wittnesses The wordes of his Centuriarists be these Augustinus Romanus ordinis Centuriator Cētur 6. An. 1●82 pag. 747. 748. Benedicti Monachu● à Gregorio Papa Anno Domini 582. Augustine a Romane a Monke of the order of Benedict was sent from Gregory the Pope in the yeare of our Lord 582. into England to wyn it to the Pope of Rome and to make it subiect to his superstitious Iurisdiction Enterin into the Kentish Isle named Tenet in the yeare of our Lord 596. hee endued Kinge Edelbert and his superstitious Wife in the Romane Religion Yett with that condition that this Popish worship should be free and not compelled After calling a councell hee obtruded the Romish Rites and customes to those Churches that it to say Altares Vestments Images Masses Chalices Crosses Candlesticks Censors Banners sacred vessels holy water thee bookes of the Romane Ceremonies Oblations Processions Pompes Tithes and the like When hee had subiected the brittane Churches to the Antichrist of Rome Romano Antichristo subiecisset hee dyed Thus wee see by D. Morton his greately reuerenced Col. 749. and esteemed frends and fellowes in Religion that the state of the Romane Church in that his allowed time was the same that it is at this present And not onely his Centuriarists but other Protestants by his owne Relation ar wittnesses Morton App. lib. 1. cap. 3. Willet de August mon. Morton supr pag. 67. l. 1. cap. 6. Centuriat centur 7. col 559. in this cause Doctor Humfrey as hee acknowledgeth saith that Gregory brought in on us ceremoniarum a burthen of Ceremonies D. Willet saith hee brought in Popery Luke Osiander and his before cited frends call that Religion ceremonias papisticas papisticall ceremonies And to vse their words Ceremonias papisticas instituturi propagaturi quod Beda vocat aliquos Christo praedicando acquirere to teach and publish papisticall ceremonies which Bede that glorie of our nation calleth to gett some to Christ by preachinge Mr. Bale an other of his frends Ioan. Bal. l. de script Brit. centur 1. in August pag. 34. fol. 3 5. and Authors hath these wordes Augustine was sent Apostle from Gregorie to instruct the English Saxons in the papisticall faith papistica fide initiandos And againe Kinge Ethelbert being conuerted receaued Romanisme with the superstitions adioyned Romanismum cum adiunctis superstitionibus suscepit Augustine brought in Al●●rs Vestments sacred Vessels Relicts and bookes of C●●●monies all which Gregory had sent vnto him with the blessinge of Peter And that these with the rest of our sacred c●remonies which they call the body of popery were not then newly Inuented but vsed in the Church of Rome when his maiestie saithe it was a Rule to all K. Speach both in faith and ceremonies shall be testified and proued hereafter in the proper question of such things by D. Morton himself and too many others of his now English Protestant confederates in Religion to be without manifest impudencie to be denyed Therefore by these Protestants The present Romane Church must be allowed to be the true Church of Christ And all their former Inuectiues against it and their departeing from it by their owne Iudgments must be recanted CHAPTER III. WHEREIN IS PROVED BY these Protestants that the Pope of Rome euer was and now lawfully is and ought so to be esteemed the supreame pastor and heade on earth of the whole Church of Christ of his sentence and Authoritie FROM hence it is euidently proued That the Pope of Rome is supreame heade of the true Church of Christ for seeing these Protestants haue tolde vs that true Regiment and discipline is a note of the true Church of Christ and thus it appeareth that the Church of Rome is this true Churehe and hath this note of true Regiment the supreame bindeing and commaundinge Authoritie of the Pope being the cheefest of that gouernment is therein concluded Likewise it so followeth by their note of true doctrine wherein they haue graunted the Church of Rome constantly persisteth in all things necessarie and essentiall such as this
proceedings here in Britannye they will finde in those lawes sett out by themselues that they warrant his supreamacie further then I meane to S. Edwards lawes published by Mr. Lambert a Protestant pag. 2. fol. 1●0 vrdge it The wordes ar these The whole land and all the Ilands to Norway and Denmarke belonge to the Crowne of his Kingedome and ar of the Appendancies and dignities of the Kinge And it is one Monarchie and one Kingedome and was sometime called the Kingedome of Britannye and now called the Kingdome of English men For Lord Eleutherius Pope who first sent an hallowed crowne to Britannye and Christianitie by Gods inspiration to Lucius Kinge of the Britans appointed and allowed to the Crowne of the Kingdome such metes and bowndes as ar said before Therefore English Protestants ar very ingratefull to that Holy Pope and Saint our so greate Benefactor And their owne Theater is a wittnes of that his loue and well deserueing of this land and their vngratitude their wordes be these Pope Eleutherius thus wrote to Lucius Kinge Theat pag. 222. n. 8. lib. 6. cap. 19. of Britannie for the reformation of the Kinge and the nobilitie of the Kingdome of Britannie you desired vs to send vnto you the Romane and Imperiall lawes which you would vse in your Kingedome of Britannie The Romane lawes and the Emperors wee may at all times mislike but the lawe of God by no meanes By the diuine clemencie you haue of late receiued in your Kingdome of Britannie the lawe and faithe of Christ you have with you in your Kingdome both the old and new testament out of them in Gods name by the ●ownsaile of your state take Corn. Tacit in annal in Hadr. Pi. Anton. M. Ant. Stowe hist Holinsh ib. Dauid in Bric Polyd. verg l. 2. h. angl pag. 42. 42 c. you alawe and therewith by Gods permission gouerne your Kingedome of Britannie About which times Lolius Calphurnius Agricola Pertinax Cl. Albinus Iunius Seuerus c. were Propretors Lieutenants and commaundinge Rulers here for the Romane Emperors as both their owne and our Historians wittnes And not onely this but after entreateinge of the saxons lawes in this Kingdome and the two much seueritie of triall in suspition of Incontinencie as they thinke they write in this maner This punishment begynning Theater pag. 287 l. 7. cap. 3. n. 6. in these Pagans and continueing vnto the yeare 750. Stephen the second and moste pontificall Pope of Rome did vtterly abolish as two seuere and ouer-rigorous for Christians to vndergoe They alledge authoritie alsoe that the Kingedome of Norway was giuen to Kinge Arthur by the Pope Pag. 317 l. 7. cap 12. Which is playnely testified in the lawes of S. Edward as they ar published by the Puritan Protestant Mr. Lambard and out of the Guliel Lambard in legib S. Edward fol. 137. 138. print at London Anno D. 1569. cum priuileg Reg. Maiest per decem library of Matthew Parker himself whome they name their Archbishop of Canterbury The words be these Impetrauit enim temporibus illis Arthurus Rex à Domino Papa curia Romana quod confirmata sit Norweia in perpetuum coronae Brytanniae in augmentum Regni huius vocauitque illam dictus Artherus Cameram Brytanniae In those times Kinge Arthur obtayned from our Lord the Pope and the Court of Rome that Norway might be confirmed for euer to the Crowne of Brytaine for encrease of this Kingdome and the said Arthur called it the chamber of Brytaine And for this cause the Norwegians say they may dwell in this Kingdome and be of the body of this Kingdome to witt of the crowne of Brytayne Of his clayme and practyse in later times in such affaires their examples ar two many to be cited But to insist in his absolute spirituall supreamacie of which I entreate as they told vs before how all spirituall Iurisdiction was deriued to the Brittannes from the Pope of Rome in prescribeing and limiteing their Episcopall Sees and priuiledges so they testifie the same in the Regiment of the Saxons for allthough England it self besides Scotland and Wales was deuided Theat pag. 278. lib. 6. cap. 54. n. 2. pag. 292 l. 7. cap. 4. n. 19. into an Heptarchie and conteyned seuen Kingedomes Kent Southsaxons Westsaxons Eastsaxons Northumberland Maria and East-Angels and none of those Kinges if they had beene Protestants could clayme to exercise any spirituall power by their doctrine further then their owne temporall commaunde yett they teach vs that the spirituall Iurisdiction in the supreame and highest degree was wholly in the Pope ouer all those Kingedomes And for proofe of this to vse their owne wordes Honorius Theat pag. 5. lib. 1. cap. 3. n. 4. appointed by the Pope the fift Archbishop of Canterbury first diuided England into parishes And then they sett downe all the Bishopricks in England vnder their twoe Metropolitanes Canterbury and Yorke which by noe possibilitie can be reconciled with an Heptarchicall Pag. 6. l. 1. or seuen fold gouernment besides that in Walles And yett not onely the welch diocesses of Landaffe S. Dauid Bangor and S. Asaph but Ireland also in those times of diuisions in temporall Regiments and Kinges were subiect not onely to the Pope but to the Archbishop of Canterbury which was euer subiect to the Pope of Rome and by him instituted Their wordes Pag. 145. lib. 4. cap. 4. n. 8. be these matters memorable within this prouince ar these First that the Bishops of Ireland were wont to be consecrated by the Archbishop of Canterbury in regarde of the primacie which they had in this contry vntill such time as ●hou Papirio a Cardinall was sent thither from Pope Eugenius the fourth to reforme ecclesiasticall discipline in this Iland And that this Kingedome of greate Brittaine hath euen from the primatiue Church of the first conuerted Brittannes submitted themselues and their posterities to the Pope of Rome in the highest and moste commaundeinge power and Authoritie in this worlde in their Iudgment a generall Councell as hereafter Cap. generall Councels infr Theater l. 6. cap. 9. pag. 206. ● 19. I thus demonstrate from this their Theater wherein they write in this order After these times the Brittannes continued constant in Christianitie and the censures of their Bishops for the greate estimation of their constancie pietie and learninge required and approued in greate poynts of doctrine amonge the Assemblies of some generall Councells as that of Sardys and Nyce in the time of greate Constantine had wee our Bishops present Whose forwardnes against the Arrian Heresie afterwards Athanasius aduanceth in his Apologie vnto Iouinian the Emperour amongst three hundred Bishops assembled at the Councell of Sardys in Anno 350. Then seing as these men teach vs generall Infra cap. gen Councels Councells ar the highest Iudge and binde all men to their decrees and our bishops that were there to consent vnto and
and the Hebrue Greeke Apostles also as Athenians But now sixe yeares triall hath taught that it is one thinge to dreame of tongues an other to knowe them And now they are said to be at a stand And would willingly giue ouer but that the Kings authoritie requireth an end But that your most learned Maiestie may se what is to be hoped for from them least the Churches be forced to buy bables for the word of God I will in few words deleuer that it may appeace that such pore students are not to be suffered to lest with the Kinge and the flocke Hitherto this greate linguists oration his exceptions are to tedious to be recited Onely because these men haue so magnified the Hebrue text of the old testament in respect of the septuaginta and vulgare Latine now this greate searcher of Hebrue monuments can heare onely for hee neuer se either of them of two perfect Hebrue copies of the old testament in all the world and both they be in the Iewes custodye one in Hierusalem and the other at Nehardegh in Mosopotamia Veteris testamenti duo exemplaria tam accurata atque mens humana prouidere potuit seruantur à Iudaeis Hierosolymis alterum alterum Nehardeghae in Mesopotamia Then if wee haue no better comfort from these Hebritians for a true Hebrue text then that England neither hath had or can procure any and none is to be had but from our Enemyes the Iewes and yet if they could procure a true copie which they haue not done there is not any one in England by their owne Iudgments able truely to translate it and these last translators were weary of their entreprise and would haue giuen it ouer after sixe yeares experience of their disabilitie but that the Kings Maiesties pleasure was to haue one end or other wee may not easely admitt such translations for holy scriptures nor Religion deduced from them for a true Religion And ●his the rather because since the birth of this new translation it is condemned by their owne approued writeings I will omitt others and onely cite one place out of their late commended history of the world in these Histor of the world l. 1. cap. ● §. 14. Chron 2. cap. 21. v. 16. The Protest new transl sup words The ill translation of Ethiopia for Chus is amonge other places made moste apparant in the second of Chronicles in these words So the Lord styrred vpp against Iehoram the spiritt of the Philistines and the Arabians which confine the Ethiopians The Geneua translation hath it which were besides the Ethiopians the new English readeth thus more ouer the lord stirred vpp against Iohoram the spiritt of the Philistines and of the Arabians that were neare the Ethiopians Now how farre it is betweene the Philistines and the Negros or Ethiopians euery man that looketh in a mapp may Iudge For hee Philistines and Arabians doe mixt and ioyne with the land of the Chusites and are distant from Ethiopia about two and thirtie or three and thirtie degrees and therefore not their next neighbours but all Egipt and the deserts of Sur and Pharan are betweene them And to aggrauate this matter the more these new Protestant translators takeing vppon them to translate the old testament out of the Hebrue and new out of the Greeke and onely alloweing those texts in words are so farre from performing it in deeds that in the old testament they haue forsaken the Hebrue text diuers thowsands of times as may be proued by their owne merginall obseruations of that matter my leasure was not to recompt them all but in Genesis the first booke they haue thus behaued themselues aboue two hundred tymes and after the same rate in all the rest As in the 5. 20. and 25. chapter of the booke of Iudges fourtye times Fyfteene tymes in Sam. l. 1. cap. 18. in the 2. Booke of Samuel in cap. 22. thirteene times in cap. 1. 7. 18 20. in fower chapters aboue fyfty times in the third booke of Kings And so they deale with the Greeke in the new testament and in the old testament where the scripture is written in the Chaldy and Hebrue mixed as in the time of captiuitie so they vse the Chaldy tongue as in Esra cap. 4. they forsake the Hebrue thrise and the Chaldye eleuen or twelue times in the second chapter of Daniel they leaue it thirteene times in the third chapter twelue times in the 5. chapter neyne times c. and in these and other places where they refuse the originall tonge as for example the Hebrue they doe it not many times to preferre either the vulgare Latine Septuagin●a or Syriacke but their owne conceipt and Imagination Yet in places where they forsake the originall to preferre any of the other it is euidently against their owne profession and Religion and in places of their former translations censured by Mr. Gregory Martyne or other English Catholicks they often times neither regard their owne or ours but giue vs new scriptures and reuelations of their owne thoughe not many times in greate matters and so in this multiplication and chaunge of scriptures they haue also multiplied and chaunged Religion deduced from them and for that one Article of their auntient creed I beleeue in the holy ghost may now say by such proceedings wee beleeue in the foure and fourtie English Protestant holy Ghosts For whosoeuer reiect all texts of scripture as their owne marginall obseruations tell vs they doe though as before often not in great things yet sometimes otherwise and deny vnwritten traditions of this kinde must needs be in such estate CHAPTER VI. PROVETH BY THESE PROtestants that the true and Iuridicall exposition of scriptures is against them and for the doctrine of the Romane Church AFTER these I am to entreate of the true lawfull and Iuridicall Exposition of holy scriptures And that it belongeth to the Church of Rome haueing both the true scriptures the true translation of them and it self haueing power and authoritie being the true Church of Christ to propose it to all Christians and not to these Protestants for no companie or congregation of men wanting and denying diuers bookes of scriptures in which diuers Articles of Religion as prayer to Angels their patronadge prayer and sacrifice for the Deade meritt of good workes c. are directly proued not so apparently taught in other scriptures besides followeing and alloweing erroneous and corrupt translations can haue the true and Iuridicall exposition of scriptures especially hauing no Iurisdiction ouer others by their owne graunt But the English Protestants are in this state Therefore they haue not this true lawfull and Iuridicall exposition of scriptures Bothe propositions are graunted before and so nothinge remaineth to be proued in this argument Further I argue thus No priuate Interpretation of scriptures by conference of places and such Rules as Protestants assigne for Interpreteinge scripture is bindeing or iuridicall But all Protestant Expositions in respect of true byndeing
worthines for the proper act and office of Iustice is to render to euery one his owne and due The Minor is thus proued by M. Wotton who entreateing of the crowne Wottō def of Perkins pag. 337. 338. 2. Timoth. 4. v. 8. of Iustice which accordinge vnto S. Paules doctrine God as a iust iudge is to render writeth thus S. Paule reckons vp his good seruices and good reason for the reward is not due to any by promise but to them that doe good workes For els what should be rewarded But why should it be called a crowne of Iustice because it is giuen to the iust according to their iust works And in that respect God is called a iust iudge in giueing this crowne because hee giues good for good And againe wee wholly subscribe to S. Wotton sup pag. 339. Augustine that God cannot but reward our good workes because of his promise and because they are such for the substance of them as hee hath enioyned and so as I haue saide often in generall Iustice they that doe well must haue well Lastely in this Question I argue thus That which deserueth condigne or worthie reward is meretorious But good deeds done in grace be such Therefore they are meritorious The Maior is euident because Meritum ex condigno Meritt by condignietie is the greatest and that which hath beene moste impugned by Protestants The Minor is concluded by his maiestie in his approbation of the Accidence before the Grammar vsually taught in England where speakeing of schoolemasters deseruings for the teacheing and instruction of children his regall and resolute sentence for this matter is vttered in these words you shall Approbat of th● Accidence init deserue of allmightie God condigne rewarde Where both deserueing which is meritt and the reward to be condigne is testified And thus much for this question out of their priuate Authors and Doctors Now lett vs cite somewhat out of their publick Theater Theater of greate Britan pag. 342. In which they deliuer vnto vs first the common opinion of that primatiue age of Christianitie in this point generally in these termes It is not to be wondered at in that these times the holy Acts of men which no doubt were many and the habitt of monkes the accounted holy garments of humilitie were so meritoriously respected and reputed in the deuoute harts of the Religeous Where wee see that this doctrine of the meritt of good workes was so generall and vniuersall that no man might wonder at it Their reason shall be answeared in his proper place Therefore seeing this vniuersall doctrine of meritts was in that vnspotted tyme of the Church as these men haue often graunted it may be wondered at with what colour or pretence of truthe these men against their owne Rule and Iudgment should now deny it or bringe it into question Especially seeing they assigne through all their worke this cause of meritt and satisfaction to haue giuen the cheife grownd and originall to so many holy and Religious fowndations in England to meritt and procure pardon of God to satisfy for the syns of themselues the fownders their frends Ancesters and posterities As wee may vnderstand by these few Examples which they propose vnto vs in this order Oswy Kinge of Northumberland Theat pag. 338. n. 2. hauing cruelly slayne Kinge Oswyne of Deirans in that place afterward for satisfaction of so heynous an offence a monastery was built as vppon like occasions many the like fowndations were layde And of him againe partly cited in an other place This Kinge Oswy hauing raygned 28. Pag. 338. n. 8. yeares falling sicke stroke with remorse for the death of good Kinge Oswyne and the blood which hee had spilt vowed a pilgrimadge to Rome So they describe Pag. 339. n. 3. vnto vs K. Wlfhere his workes of satisfaction in building Churches and monasteryes for his Murthering or Martyringe his sonnes Wlfald and Ruffin And againe Ethelbert of Kent in fowndinge Pag. 302. n. 4. S. Paules Church in London in his charter hath these wordes Ethelbert Rex Deo inspirante pro animae suae Remedio dedit Episcopo Mileto terram c. Ethelbert Kinge by Gods Inspiration for remedy of his soule hath giuen to Bishop Miletus the land called Tu●lingham for the Monastery of Pag. 343. n. 4. S. Paule And againe Kinge Ethelbald liuing a wicked life being reprehended by the epistle of Boniface an English man and Archbishop of Mentz in repentance released and priuiledged the Church from all tributes to himself and built the Abbey of Crowland in Lincolneshire for the pacifyeing of Gods wrathe towards his syns And againe Kinge Offa in testimonie of his Repentance for the blood hee had Pag. 345. spilt hee gaue the tenth part of all his goods vnto the Church men and vnto the poore At Bathe hee also built an other Monastery and in Warwickshire a Church where the adioyninge towne from it and him beareth the name Offa Churche In greate deuotion hee went to Rome where hee made his Kingedome subiect to a Tribute then called Peter peace afterwards Rome-scot In honor of S. Albane and in repentance of his syns ouer against Verolamium in the place then called Holmehurst where that Proto-martyr of Brittaine for the constant profession of Christ loste his heade Offa built a magnificent Monastery endoweinge it with lands and ritch reuenewes for the mayntenance of an hundred monkes And thus againe King Ethelstan hauing consented Pag. 363. to his brother Edwynes death repented the same for besides his seuen yeares penance voluntarily vndergone to pacify the ghost of his betrayed brother hee built the two monasteryes of Middleton and Michelnesse goeing into the North against the Pag. 364. Danes as hee was a man much deuoted to godward turned a side to visitt the Tombe of S. Iohn of Beuerley where earnestly praying for his prosperous successe for want of richer iuells there offered his knife voweing that if hee returned hee would redeeme it with a worthie pryce Which as they tell vs hee truely performed though they mention not what it was But to putt vs out of doubt that both this doctrine of Meritt and satisfaction and the execution of it by such meritorious good deeds was both gratefull and pleaseing to God and honorable with all good men first they testifie of this laste recited Kinge in these wordes relateing of a straunge miracle wrought by Pag. 364. sup n 8. 10 pag. 365. him thus they add The enemyes by craft and subtlety comeing to his campe hee awakeing boldly rushing vppon his enemyes putt them backe with the death of fyue petty Kings twelue Dukes and well neare of the whole Army Hee ioyned Northumberland to the rest of his Monarchye and returninge to Beuerly redeemed his owne knife His dominion was the largest that any Saxon before him had enioyed and his fame the greatest with all forreyne princes who sought his frendshipp both with loue and alliance
by matching with his scisters and presenting him with rich and rare presents for Hugh Kinge of Fraunce besides other inestimable Iuells sent him the sword of Constantine the greate in the hilt whereof all couered with gold was one of the nayles that fastened Christ to the crosse and of the speare and crowne of thornes Before him they make Kinge Elfred the most worthie and after him Kinge Edward a Saint and yet make them bothe in doctrine and practise of meritt and meritorious workes to be renowned Of the first they Pag. 351. write in this maner Elfred the fourth sonne of Kinge Ethelwolfe and ladie Osburge his wife a child of fyue yeares old was sent very honorably attended to the citie of Rome where Leo then Bishop confirmed him was his godfather at confirmation and anoynted him to the expectation of a Kingedome growne in yeares hee grewe so in discretion magnanimitie and fauour of all men that in the successiue Raignes of his three elder brethren hee ruled as a viceroy or secondary Kinge vnder euery of them and Pag. 357. after them at the last succeeded in the English monarchye Hee was a moste worthie prince Gurmund or Gurthurne the danish Kinge with thirtie of his cheife nobilitie came to conditions with Kinge Elfred and are christened His buildings were many bothe to Gods seruice and other publicke vse as at Pag. 359. Edelingsey a Monastery at Winchester a new Minster and at Shastesbury a howse of Nunnes wherein hee made his daughter Ethelgeda the Abbesse His other holy workes and meritorious deeds are to many to be remembred in this place but they conclude of him in these words The Pag. 359. sup n. 25. 28. vertues of this prince are matchable to any that euer raigned before him and exceed the moste that euer raigned after him both in seruice of God c. Concerninge K Edward syrnamed the Confessor it would be to tedious to make recitall but of parte of his holy vertues and meritorious workes in this place I onely add from these men The 40000. pownds yearely of Dane guilt was remitted by him payed for 40. yeares continuance Pag. 397. 398. 399. 400. 401. 402. out of the lands of all except onely the cleargye because say our auntient lawes the Kings reposed more confidence in the prayers of holy Church then in the power of Armes His words of Q. Editha his wife openly vppon his death bedd were ●hee was his wife but in secret embraceings as his scister K. Edward and his successors after miraculously cureth the disease called struma now the Kings euill with other propheticall and heauenly guists hee was endowed Hee vowed a pilgrimadge to Hierusalem for dischardg whereof hee built the Church of Westminister c. These Protestants conclusion of him is this Kiuge Edward a prince of much vertue and integritie of life raigned with such Iustice and pietie that hee obtayned the venerable name of Saint and vnto posterities is distinguished from other Edwards by the adiunct Confessor ô how happy were it if either Catholicks or Protestants could truly write so much of Protestant princes neither frends to the doctrine or fauoures of exercise of meritts and meritorious deeds Therfore the vniuersitie of Cambridge by their owne Doctors were ouerseene to say Wee houlde charitie to be no concurringe cause of iustification with faith Yet somewhat more of this matter is conteyned in the next chapter CHAPTER V. WHEREIN IS PROVED BY these English Protestants that the commaundements of God are possible to be kept by grace may and ought so to be kept CONCERNINGE the keeping of Concil Trid sess 6. can 11. Gods commaundements The Councell of Trent hath thus defined No man ought to vse that temerarious saying and condemned by the Fathers vnder Anathema that the precepts of God are vnpossible to be kept of a man iustified for God doth not commaunde vnpossible things but commaunding doth admonish both to doe what thou canst and to aske what thou canst not doe and doth help that thou mayest be able to doe whose commaundements are not heauie whose yoke is sweete and burden light for they which are the children of God doe loue and they which loue him as himself wittnesseth keepe his sayeings Hitherto the Councell of Trent for the doctrine of the Romane Church now that the English Protestants by their owne writings are or ought to be of the same opinion in this question thus I argue Whatsoeuer all Christians Iustely vowe to keepe and performe that in all true doctrine they are able to keepe and performe But by the opinion of English Protestants all Christians vowe to keepe the commaundements Therefore they may and must keepe them The Maior is manifest by Protestants graunteing with the holy scriptures and Fathers that iust vowes be both of things possible and must be kept for if the iust promise of man to man bindeth how much more a iust promise to God which is a vowe obligatory and byndeing The Minor is proued by the publicke Protestant English communion booke reconfirmed by his Maiesties authoritie which both teacheth that wee are bownde to Communion Booke tit chatechisme and tit publicke Baptisme §. well beloued frends keepe the commaundements and all that are baptized vowe to doe it Then seeing all English Protestants doe either sweare or subscribe vnto and dayly followe and execute the doctrine and prescription of that their authenticall Rituall and Directorie as they cannot by their oath or subscription deny it without periury or denyall of their faith so by the rule it self they committ sacriledge in reiecting that doctrine Secondly I argue thus All things that are of necessitie to bee obserued or kept of men in Religion are possible But the commaundements are of necessitie to be obserued and kept Therefore they are possible The Maior is so euidently true that if it were false all Christians of necessitie must be damned and none saued not beeing able to doe that which of necessitie they must doe or els not be saued but damned The Minor is proued by the present Protestant Archbishops of Canterbury and D. Feilds allowed Greeke Church which censureth thus The commaundements of God of necessitie are Hieremias patriarch constant censur cap. 5. to be obserued Therefore if they would deny their cōmunion Booke it self which before hath proued the same for vowes iustly made are of necessitie to be kept yet if D. Feild and such will be members of their allowed true Church they must be of this opinion I the rather hope so because D. Feild with others say out of the Churche there is no saluation Thirdly that doctrine which is Feild sup paert 1. cap. 1. so absurde that by Protestants opinion no man teacheth it is not true But this of the vnpossibilitie to keepe the commaundements is such Therefore it is not true The Maior is manifest The Minor is made as manifest by these words of D. Sutcliff Sutcliff ag D. Kellison
the pictures of the Cherubyns Then if the pictures of Cherubins being mere Creatures were publickly in the temple worshipped how much more is the picture and Imadge of their and our Lord Iesus Christ to be had in reuerence and so to be vsed And so of Imadges of his seruants and Saincts in their due proportion Because the Saincts themselues may be honored and prayed vnto as I am to proue by these Protestants in the next chapter And this is further proued by these Protestant Theat of gr Britt pag. 342. n. 2. Bishop in their Theater where they testifie in these words By the cleargie that are accompted the light of the worlde in a Councell at Rome held vnder Pope Constantyne the first it was decreed and commaunded that carued Imadges should be made to the memoriall of Saints and should be set vp in Churches with respectiue adoration Which is to be referred vnto and terminated in the prototypa Saints represented by such Imadges and by such Images yeelded vnto them and in them ended And in an other place they call such Imadges Monuments of Christian Religion and sufficiently proue they were euen from the time of Christ both vsed for the memory and reuerence of Christ or his Saints whome they represented Their words of the miraculous Imadge erected in honor of Christ by the woman in the Ghospell cured by the hemm of his garment touched and reuerenced by her testified by Eusebius and others are these Iulian the Apostata destroyeth all monuments of Theat pag. 266. Christian Religion amonge others the Imadge of Christ made of brasse at Caesarea Philippi where the miraculously curing herbe grewe And they condemne him for this wickednes in ouerthrowing that Imadge erected to the honor of Christ and miraculously confirmed both to be religeously erected to his honor and so continued But let vs come into our owne nation where they will giue vs some light though by them misted what they can in what reuerence these haue beene vsed in this Iland euen from the first conuersion of the Brittaynes and euer after both with Kings and subiects Of Subiects thus they write In Diocletian his time a thowsand Saints suffered Martyrdome at Lichfeild in Theat pag. 206. n. 19. memorye whereof the citye beareth armes to this day in an Eschacheon of Landskip sondry parsons diuersly martyred Of our Christian primatiue Kings Pag. 207. n. 22. first they write thus Our Kings ranked for sanctitie before all other potentates of the earth as Vincentius Pag. 206. n. 20. recordeth Then thus The virgin Mary with her sonne in her Armes in the ensigne of Arthur so often desplayed for Christ doth shewe the badge of that ages Christianitie And againe In Pag. 207. n. 21. the auntient Charters of the fowndation of Glastenbury it is called Origo Religionis in Anglia in an other Tumulum Sanctorum ab ipsis discipulis Domini aedificatum fuisse vener abilem The beginninge of Religion in England that it was a graue of Saints builded by the disciples of our Lord and vener able Kinge Arthur benefactor vnto it his Armes there an Escucheon whereon a crosse with the virgin Mary in the first quarter is set and held to be the Armes of that Abbey And further of our English Kings in this order from the yeare of Christ 643. they testifie how they honoured these holy Imadges in their moste honorable Ensignes and badges of honor Kinge Oswy giueth Pag. 385. n. c. a playne crosse in euery part a Lyon Rampant The next Kinge Wlfhere a S. Andrewes crosse So these Kings following Kinge Ethelred Kenred Chelred Ethelbald Offa Egfride Kenwolfe to the yeare 800. And so they recompt after of Kinge Egbert Ethelwolfe Ethelbald Ethelbert Ethelred Elfred Edward syrnamed the elder Ethelstan Edmund Edred Edwy Edgar Edward syrnamed the Martyr Ethelred Edmund syrnamed Ironsyde and Edward the Confessor And of these English Kings in an other place they write in this maner The Saxons before Kinge William his time vsed onely Pag. 424. n. 60. to signe their Charters with guilt crosses and such markes So greate and respectiue regard our blessed Kings of that happy age bore vnto such Imadges signes and remembrances of our Sauiour and his holy Saints that euen in their temporall actions they euer had them in presence and memory Much more in Churches and places of holy worshipp where they vsed them in as religeous respects as the Romane Church doth at this time as wee may gather by the very words of these Protestants in this booke where they write of Kinge Inas esteemed a Saint by these men themselues in these Theat pag. 298. 299. words Kinge Ine buildeth the renowned Abbey of Glastenbury moste stately to the honor of Christ Peter and Paule where formerly stood the old cell of Ioseph of Aremathea which this Kinge Ina after a most sumptuous maner new built the chapell whereof hee garnished with gold and syluer and gaue rich ornaments thereto as Altare Chalice Censor Candlesticks Bason and holy water buckett Imadges and pale for the Altare of an incredible value And how these Imadges were vsed so placed in cheefest place of adoration and with such other Instruments of Catholicke worshipp wee cannot make a question If wee should they will direct vs and make it euident that such reuerence as Catholicks now vse was then vsed vnto them Their words of Kinge Canutus are these Canutus the Danes Theat pag. 205. n. 17. greatest Kinge so soone as hee became a Christian in England held it his cheefest maiestie to be the vassall of Christ And with such deuotion as then was taught crowned the Crucifixe at Winchester with the crowne hee wore and neuer after through all his Raigne by any meanes would weare the same CHAPTER X. WHEREIN THE CATHOLICKE doctrine of prayer and honor to Saincts and Angells is proued true by these English Protestants writers NEXT I must by the Protestant Relator his order entreate of Supplication to Saints and to Angells consequently Of this matter thus wee reade in the Councell of Trent The holy Councell doth commaunde Concil trident sess 9. all Bishops and others which haue the office and chardge of teaching That according to the vse of the Catholicke and Apostolicke Church receaued from the primatiue times of Christian Religion and the consent of holy Fathers and decrees of holy Councells cheefely that they diligently instruct the faithfull of the Intercession of Saincts Inuocation honor of Relicks and lawfull vse of Imadges teaching them that it is good that the Saincts which raigne with Christ offer their prayers to God for men and that it is profitable humbly to call vppon them and to fly to their prayers ayde and helpe to obtayne benefites of God by his sonne Iesus Christ our Lord who alone is our Redeemer and Sauiour Hitherto the doctrine of Catholicks in this Question Now let vs argue from these English Protestants to the same purpuse First I
there by them esteemed truly worthie of honor And how honorable such holy Relicks haue euer beene especially in this nation from the first conuersion thereof to Christ these Protestants themselues in their Theate● though so much as they can suppressing all honor and memory of such things will sufficiently testifie Concerninge the often and frequent pilgrimadges to Rome to visitt and reuerence the holy monuments and relicks there they haue told vs before in these words Not onely Preists and lay men vowed and Theat pag. 305. performed pilgrimadges to Rome but Kings Queenes and Bishops also did the like And in particular in these words Kinge Kenred abandoned both crowne Pag. 307. and contry and went to Rome where of Pope Constantine hee receaued the tonsure and habit of a monke at the Apostles tombes Kings Cadwallader and Pag. 164. Chodwald if not both one abandoned their kingedoms about the yeare 682. touke habitt of Religion in Rome so Kinge Iuor a Brittaine and Kinge Iue a Saxon. Ceadwalla King of the west Saxons goeth on Pag. 298. pilgrimadge to Rome Kinge Inas after hee had raigned Pag. 298. in greate prosperitie 37. yeares and odd moneths professing voluntary pouertie went to Rome where in the habitt of a Religeous man hee ended his life in pore estate Kinge Osroy vowed a pilgrimadge to Rome Pag. 338. 345. Pag. 391. Kinge Offa in greate deuotion went to Rome I haue spoken before how Kinge Canatus went on pilgrimadge to Rome to visitt the sepulchres of S. Peter and S. Paule And so of others And Pag. 285. for Hierusalem so farr and daungerously distant thus they write Yt was an auntient custome to goe to Hierusalem on pilgrimadge with a redd crosse worne on their backe whence the name crosse-backe or in old English crouche-backe was to them attributed Whence Edmund Earle of Lancaster second sonne to Henry 3. gott that name So the crouched or Pag. 92. crossed friers And of Princes in particular thus they write Lagman Kinge of man gaue ouer his kingdome tooke the crosse wento to Hierusalem They tell vs also of Q. Helena a most vertuous religeous Pag. 205. c. 258. brittish Lady Mother to Emperor Constantine the greate her pilgrimadge to Hierusalem And agayne Offa heire to the crowne of Eastangles vppon Pag. 311. a Religeous deuotion tooke his pilgrimadge to the sepulchre of Christ And agayne Swayne eldest sonne Pag. 400. of Earle Goodwyn so potent against K. Edward the Confessor vppon a remorse of Conscience vndertooke a pilgrimadge to Hierusalem and in his returne dyed in Lycia Of Robert Father to Kinge William the Pag. 413. first they write in this maner Seeing at the city phalesia in Normandy a moste bewtifull damsell called Arlett tooke her to his bedd he begatt on her William his onely sonne and after vppon a remorse of Conscience vndertooke a pilgrimadge vnto Hierusalem from whence hee neuer againe returned Duke Robert intending his pious pilgrimadge vnto the holy Land assembled all his nobilitie caused them to sweare fealtie vnto his sonne William beeing then but seuen yeares old Entering Iury not able to trauayle was borne in a litter vppon the Saracens sholders and neare vnto the cytie meetinge a returning pilgryme desired him to report in his contrie what hee there sawe which is said hee I am caried to heauen vppon the deuills backe And to leaue forreine contries with their holy places and relicks thus reuerenced this our owne nation as it visited other contries in this respect so in the same also it was visited and frequented of them Thus they write Charles Kinge of Fraunce congratulated Pag. 345. Kinge Offa with letters of Gladnes both for his victories and Christian piecie in his land embraced desiring of Offa safe conduct for such his subiects as come to his contry in deuotion to God In which amonge other places Glastenbury was renowned for ●hat Rectory to vse their words was in the Pag. 207. charters of Edgar Edmund Elfred Edward Bringwalthius Kentwin Baldred Ina Kenwall the Conqueror Rufus and others continually termed THE GRAVE OF SAINCTS THE MOTHER CHVRCH THE DISCIPLES FOVNDATION Of the hand of Kinge Oswald thus they write After his death Pag. 337. it neuer consumed but was shrined in siluer in S. Peters Church at Bedda now Bambrough with worthy honor was worshipped for the miracles and cuers that Pag 364. it did as likewise the earth wherein his blood was spilt They tell vs also of the pilgrimadge and reuerence to the Relicks of S. Ihon of Beuerly Pag. 391. both by Kings and subiects Kinge Canutus before offered vp his crowne vppon the Martyrs Saint Edmunds tombe And honored the body of S. Elphegus at the translation 392. Pag. 83. of it from London to Canterbury The Relicks of S. Cuthbert at Durham were visited in pilgrimadge and reuerenced by our Kings and others They tell vs how the bodies of Pag. 294. the two yonge Princes Nephewes to K. Egbert were miraculously reuealed their names Ethelred and Etherbert and greately reuerenced Of K. Kenelme thus they write Pag 307. 308. Murthered obscurely buried but miraculously knowne and afterwards with greate honor and ceremony translated to the Monastery of Winchcombe which his father founded And so of that glorious and noble Saint Neote supposed to bee the sonne of Pag. 351. 352. Kinge Ethelwolfe brought vp at Glastenbury Hee planted a Monastery in Cornewall whereunto hee vsed for deuotion and studious meditation beeing one of the first diuinitie Readers in Oxford often to withdrawe himself which of his aboade there was afterwards called NEOTESTOKE and when hee was deade his body was with greate honor interred in the countrie of Huntington at a place then called ANVLFESBVRIE and afterward in regard of his Interment Saint Neotes and now Saint Needs And in the same shire of Huntington at S. Iues Pag. 57. they tell vs that S. Iue a Persian an Heremite beeing buryed his body was vncorrupted in Robes Episcopall Had in greate honor and the towne tooke denomination of him And so of others to many to bee recited CHAPTER XV. Of the reall presence of Christ and transsubstantiation in the blessed Sacrament of the Altare BECAVSE I would bee loath to omitt any one question especially of moment wherein these Protestants take exceptiō against the doctrine of the Church of Rome I will next make recitall what their two greate writers D. Sutcliff and D. Willet most dislike therein and Answere it vnto them and all others in whatsoeuer not before allowed and iustified by their owne writers D. Sutcliff making mention of those Articles Sutcliff Subu pag. 44. which hee supposeth wee cannot iustifie onely reciteth these that followe Reall presence Transsubstantiation the sacrifice of Christs bodie for the quicke and deade halfe communion Popes supreamacie Indulgences worshipping of Imadges and Purgatorie D. Willet as before assigneth these that Willet Antil pag. 264.
it and it is a reasonable satisfactiō euen to humane reason from whence Protestant arguments against it bee deduced that the maner is by Transsubstantiation as wee Catholicks teache no man but Irreligeous and vnreasonable can call it into question And hee writeth further of this matter in these words it is on all sides plainely Couell sup pag. 119. confessed that this Sacrament is a true and reall participation of Christ who thereby imparteth himself euen his whole entire parson Therefore if the whole entire parson of Christ which cannot bee without his bodie and blood is there and there imparted and receaued damnable is that diminisheing doctrine wherein sacramētaries would haue it but a signe figure And hee expressely teacheth that they doe not or should not differ from the Romane Churche concerning the true reall and substantiall presence of Christ in this Sacrament Which hee as plainely expresseth where entreatinge of the dignitie of Preists hee writeth thus To these parsons God Couell sup pag. 87. imparted power ouer his mysticall bodie which is the societie of soules and ouer that naturall which is himself for the knitting of both in one a worke which Antiquitie doth call the makinge of Christs bodie And in an other treatise hee speaketh of the same matter in this maner The power of the Couell modest examinat pag. 105. Ministry by blessing visible Elements it maketh them inuisible grace It giueth daily the holy Ghost It hath to dispose of that flesh which was giuen for the life of the worlde and that blood which was powred out to redeeme soules Hitherto this Learned Protestant whose words bee so plaine in this point that no conclusion but themselues needeth to bee inferred from them And not onely in this but other Questions as before these Protestants of England are so cleare for Catholiks doctrine and against that which their parlamentarie Religion doth or would seeme to teache that D. Willet Willet apud Parkes against Limbom pag. 20. 21. def first testim writeth of them in this sorte They maintayne traditions free will freedome from sin Iustification by workes workes of super erogation of transsubstantiation with diuers others Therefore euen by Protestants this sacred doctrine of the Romane Churche is to bee embraced and defended as well taught by Catholicks Protestants and D. Feilds true Greeke Church also from which lastely thus I argue That doctrine which is taught by the true Church in Protestants Iudgment which by them cannot err in any essentiall thinge is true But the doctrine of the Romane Church concerning the reall presence and transsubstantiation is such Therefore it is true The first proposition is proued and graunted before And the second is manifest in these the expresse words of the Greeke Churches censure vppon Protestant doctrine It is the Iudgment of the Church that in the holy Hierem. in censur cap. 10. supper after consecration and benediction the breade doth passe and is chaunged into the verie bodie itself of Christ and the wyne into that blood of his by the power of the holy Ghost For our Lord in the same night wherein hee was betrayed taking breade and giuing thankes brake it and saide take and eate this is not breade or a figure of my bodie but this is my very bodie and my blood So that both then and now the breade is transformed and chaunged into his bodie and the wyne into his blood as our Lord promised and affirmed in many places of scriptures And this is more then sufficient of this matter especially seeinge not onely Queene Elizabeth in her Parliam An. 1. Elizab parl 1. Iacob parl 1. Edw. 6 c. bothe kindes first Parlament receaued this doctrine of Transsubstantiation by allowing and reuiuing the statute of Kinge Edward the sixt in that behalfe and this their statute was neuer yett repealed But also in the first parlament of his maiestie confirmed with the rest of Q. Elizabeth The Protestant publishers of Praefat. in Petr. Gallatin Frāc An. 1602. Mortō App. pag. 396. pag. 395 Petrus Gallatinus tell vs that the testimonies which hee bringeth from the Rabbynes before Christ are vndeniable which allowed D. Morton writeth thus They are more playne and pregnant for transsubstantiation then are these sayings of transsubstantiators themselues They make so directly for transsubstantiation that the moste Romish Doctors for the space of allmoste a thowsand yeares after Christ did not in so expresse termes publish this mystery to the world Againe D. Androwes Protestant Bishop Casaubon resp ad Card. Per. pag. 50. 51. of Ely cited by Casaubon and Casaubon himself from our Kinge himself as hee saith affirme Yt is Christs body the same obiect and thing which the Romane Church beleeueth Therefore acknowledging there is a chaunge in this Sacrament as commonly they do that before the words of consecration it was breade and wyne and after is the same obiect and thing which the Romane Church beleeueth the body and blood of Christ This chaunge beeing from breade into the body of Christ and from wyne into his bloode which is a chaunge Substantiae in Substantiam of one substance into an ohter must needs bee as wee Catholicks teache Transsubstantiation CHAPTER XVI Of the holy Sacrifice of Christs blessed bodie blood cōmonly called the Masse daily offered in the Church AND hereby is not onely proued the Catholicke doctrine of this particular question of Christs reall presence in the B. Sacrament and the maner how by transsubstantiation of the elements breade and wyne by power of his omnipotent worde into his moste sacred bodie and blood but those also which depend from thence as is before remembred the sufficiencie of communicating of such as doe not offer the holy sacrifice first instituted and euer to be continued in both kindes in the one kinde onely as also the true externall and publicke sacrifice of Christs true Church consistinge of the oblation and offering of his most B. bodie and blood in these holy Misteries for which because it hath beene so prophanely and blasphemously contradicted by diuers of our English Protestants I meane to speake a little more particularly therein and from themselues first argue thus Whatsoeuer is the reall and true bodie and blood of Christ now vnseperable from his moste blessed soule and is publickly offered vnto God by the lawfully called and authorized preists of his Church is a true publicke and holy sacrifice But that which is commonly called the Eucharist or blessed Sacrament of the altare offered by Catholicke preists of the Romane Church in Masse is such Therefore it is a true publicke and holy sacrifice The Maior proposition is euidently true and confessed of all men of learning in Christianitie neither can be doubted of any that is ignorant if hee knoweth the termes themselues expressely signifieing and shewing the veritie thereof euen by the light of nature The second proposition is also more then aboundantly proued and verified by these
further prophesieth of other calamities to the Land after his death Queene Elfrida this greate patronesse of those wicked Marriadges and Murderesse of that blessed Kinge Martyr acknowledged her error and did perpetual penance for those Impieties their owne words thereof bee these Elfrida the second wise of Kinge Edgar procured the Theat pag. 372. n. 17. murder of Kinge Edward her sonne in lawe that her owne sonne Ethelred might come to the crowne and afterwards to purifie his and her husbands ghost and to stopp the peoples speaches of so wicked a fact shee founded the Abbeis of Amsbury and Whorwell in the Pag. 374. n. 10. counties of Wiltshire and South-hampton in which later shee liued with greate repentance and penance vntill the day of her death But both the life and death of them that repented not was by these mens relation odious and execrable I will onely exemplify in two Kings Ethelred before related and Kinge Edwyne before him both maintayners of Preists marriadge of Kinge Edwyne they write in these words Theat pag. 366. n. 7. 8. Pag. 369. n. 2. 3. Kinge Edwyne the day of his coronation before his nobles sittinge in counsell at that age not aboue thirteene yeares old with shamelesse and vnprincely lust abused a lady of greate estate and his neare kinsewoman Hee was a greate enemy vnto the Monkish orders whom from the monastery of Malmesbury Glastenbury and others hee expelled placing married Preists in their Romes Dunstan likewise the Abbot Saint of Glostenbury hee banished the Realme for his ouerbold reprehensions c. His subiects deny him obedience And sett vpp Prince Edgar his brother in Mercia and Northumberland not fully fourteene yeares old Edwyne then raigninge in a still decaying state was held of such is subiects in no better esteeme then was Iehoram of Iudah who is said to haue liued without beeing desired for very greefe whereof after foure yeares of his Raigne hee ended his life His wife thought to bee to Neare in the blood royall to bee matched with him in spousall bedd the subiects dislikinge of the vnlawfull marriadge the cause of Dunstans banishment failed by degrees to performe their duties to their Kinge and her they likewise forced to a seperation in the third yeare of his regardlesse gouernment The miseryes and punishments of Kinge Ethelred and this Kingedome for his syns they recompt in this maner Ethelred not able Theat pag. 376. 377. to resist the Danes his subiects not loueing him payeth vnto them 10000. pounds to depart An other peace hee purchaseth with 16000. pownds The next composition 20000. pownds Then 24000. pownds Then 30000. pownds and lastely 40000. pownds vntill the land was emptied of all the coyne the Kingdome of her glorye the nobles of courage commons of content and the Soueraigne of his wonted respect and obseruaunce The miseryes of this land for the syns of the patrons of such marriadges as now be defended and honoured in England which then it felt are to many and lamentable to be remembred at this time And a man may iustly call it a straunge Example that amonge other straunge punishments of Kinge Henry the eight that greate patron of Cranmer that marryed bishop that mared Religion and supreame head of such a Church that in his life time so iumbled tumbled and tumbled the world together should haue no better commendation of these Protestants now but to be ranked by them as the cheifest amonge wicked and iustly punished English Kings in their late published history of the worlde in these words Now for Kinge Henry the eight if History of the world in pref all the pictures and patterns of a mercilesse prince were loste in the worlde they might all agayne be paynted to the life out of the story of this Kinge And because Protestants memoryes serue them not to call to mynde the holynes sanctitie and Saints that haue beene in our English Catholicke Cleargie but like filthy swyne desyre to tumble moyle and roote in dyrt lett them cast ouer their accompts throughe out the historyes of this kingedome begynning with their owne Marriadges and tyme and so ascendinge to the first conuersion of this land to Christ and it will be no difficult Auditt to make that they themselues and those which were marryed as these be were the moste disordered prophane and irreligeous that were in our English Cleargie lett them make the calculation I may not now intend it my methode will not allowe it Being fittest for such as be partakers of such impieties Onely to begyn their reckoninge I must putt them in mynde out of their Theater and other their owne historyes penned by Protestants That as this Kingedome of our English or saxon Christians hath beene but twyse conquered and ouerrunne once by the Danes then by the Normans the greatest miseries and punishments it hath endured So the same their Theater other histories and Protestant writings neuer obiect vnto vs more Married and disordered Preists and cleargie men then at those tymes God of his mercy graunt that their third state of married ministers presage vs better bydeings and bring vs greater comforts Of vowes and profession of perpetuall chastitie and other workes of perfection it is further entreated in the proper question of such holy and religious life and conuersation CHAPTER XVIII OF PVRGATORIE AND PRAYER for the deade AFTER this lett vs entreate of prayer for the deade and Purgatorie And because these Protestāts before haue giuen so greate allowance to the Greeke Church especially D. Feild Intituling the 5. chapter of his third Feild l. 3. c. 5. in titul booke Of the nature of scisme and kindes of yt and that it no way appeareth that the Churches of Greece c. Are hereticall or in damnable schisme And it is their common assertion that the doctrine of purgatorie is onely taught by the Romane and not Greeke Church I will first thus argue from the authority thereof That doctrine which is taught by that Church which is neither hereticall nor damnably scismaticall cannot bee hereticall nor damnable but orthodoxe and Catholicke But the doctrine of Purgatorie is taught by this so Iustified Church the Greeke Church Therefore not hereticall nor damnable But orthodoxe and Catholicke The first proposition is euidently true for it is the doctrine and practice of any companie or priuate parson that giueth vnto it the denomination Hereticall Schismaticall Orthodoxe c. The second proposition is proued by these Protestant Testimonies following First the Protestant Relator writing of this Greeke Church speaketh thus With Rome Relation of Relig. c. 53. or c. 54. they concurre in the opinion of transsubstantiation and generally in the seruice and whole bodie of the Masse in praying to Saincts in auriculare confession in offeringe of sacrifice and prayer for the deade and these without any or with no materiall difference They hold Purgatorie also and worshipping of pictures Therefore these doctrines of purgatorie the rest must needs