Selected quad for the lemma: kingdom_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
kingdom_n king_n power_n regal_a 2,103 5 11.1413 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A26898 Church-history of the government of bishops and their councils abbreviated including the chief part of the government of Christian princes and popes, and a true account of the most troubling controversies and heresies till the Reformation ... / by Richard Baxter ... Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1680 (1680) Wing B1224; ESTC R229528 479,189 470

There are 42 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

contention he made an Oath to ask the Pope forgiveness if the Pope would come into Germany The Pope on his way fearing that the Emperor coming toward him with an Army would apprehend him turned back again and betook him to a strong City of his Patroness one Mathildis a woman The Emperor with his Army travelled to him and came to the Gates of the City and in a great and sharp winter frost putting off his Royal Ornaments came barefoot to confess his fault and ask forgiveness of the Pope The Pope would not suffer him to come in He patiently stayed three daies in the Suburbs continually begging pardon and the Citizens moved with Compassion At last the woman Mathildis and Adelai a Savoy Earl and the Abbot of Cluny became petitioners for him and prevailed for mercy with the Pope and he was absolved and reconciled to the Church having sworn a peace and promised Obedience I give you the words of Platina all along And now whether Hildebrand or Henry was the better man in common morals I that knew them not must refer you to the Historians of that age of whom some extol the Pope and depreciate the Emperor and others honour the Emperor and deeply accuse the Pope But if an Emperor that travelled so far in●o another Country and put off his ornaments and with his Army waited three daies patiently in the Suburbs of a womans City barefoot in a great frost begging mercy and pardon of a Priest before he could be let in and after this sware obedience to him I say If this Prince did not yet sufficiently submit but deserve to be turned out of his Empire though at the cost of blood and desolation to the innocent Countries it will be hard to know when the Obedience and Submission of Kings is enough to satisfie an ambitious Prelate But the Popes Historians say that the Emperor brake his Covenant It is a hard thing for a King that promiseth Subjection and Obedience to a Pope to be sure to keep his word unless he foreknew what would be commanded him when he hath taken away his Power and Kingdom by parts he may command his life It 's a great doubt to me when God hath made Princes the Rulers of Prelates and Procurators of his Church whether it be not a sin against God and their undertaken office for these Princes to cast off this trust and work because a Pope or Prelate claimeth it The Pope still charged him with sacriledge But I doubt he expounded his meaning when he deposed him for diminishing the Majesty of the Church that is of the Pope and Prelates To proceed in the History In the 3d. or 4th battle it was that Rodulph was slain and It was the Popes denial to disown or excommunicate Rodulph after so low a submission of the Emperor that enraged Henry and made him think of another remedy than to be a Prelates slave The Pope called all the Bishops that cleaved to the Emperor seditious He condemneth Roland the German Legate and sendeth into Germany Legates of his own with a Mandamus We command that no King Arch-Bishop Bishop Duke Earl Marquess or Knight dare resist our Legates c. And the Penalty to the disobedient is terrible viz. We accurse him from Christ and take from him his part of Victory by Arms. Sure if Popes had the power of Victory they need not so oft have fled to Castles nor to have rid on an Ass with the face backward nor to have suffered what many of them have done All this he doth Interpositâ Dei et B. Petri authoritate quâ nulla potest esse major Did Peter ever think that his name would have thus subdued Emperors and Kings The Pope again in a prayer to God and St. Peter reciteth the 2d Psalm and telleth them how the Emperor would cast off his yoke and again curseth him from Christ and deposeth him from all his Government and absolveth all his Subjects from the Oath of Obedience saying that he that may bind and loose in Heaven hath power to take away on Earth both Empires Kingdoms and Principalities and whatever men have to give or take away If we Iudge the ruling Angels how much more their Servants Therefore saith he to the Bishops Let Kings and all secular Princes understand by the example of this man how great your power is in Heaven and how much God esteemeth you and let them fear hereafter to break the commands of the Church Pass this sentence presently on Henry that all may understand that this Son of iniquity fell not from his Kingdom by Chance but by your endeavor Plat. p. 180. Rodulph being killed the Rebels set up the Emperors Son a Lad against his own Father But at that present he was quieted and the Emperor went with an Army into Italy and first Conquered the Army of Mathildis the Popes Patroness and brought his own Pope Clement the 3d. to the Chair and was crowned by him He besieged Gregory in the Castle Guiscard a Norman cometh with an Army to fight for the Pope The Citizens resist him the Emperor being drawn out to Sens. Guiscard burnt and destroyed that part of the City which is between the Laterane and the Capitol and took the Capitol and destroyed it He gave the prey of the City to his Souldiers and delivered Gregory and carried him away to C●ssinum and Salernum where he dyed having reigned 12 years Bin. saith that Henry besieged Rome three years before he took it When Robert Guiscard had delivered the Pope he deposed quantum in se all the new Cardinals made by Clement 3. and cursed the Emperor again Gregory himself saith that Italian French and German Bishops were for the Emperor and they were also for Clement 3. How shall we know then which was the true Pope § 44. No less than ten Books of Hildebrand's Epistles are added by Binnius to his life Most of them for the Papal Interest In lib. 2. Ep. 5. He talketh of Philip King of France as he did of the Emperor saying he was no King but a Tyrant and declaring that he was resolved to take his Kingdom from him if he did not amend his wicked life One of his crimes was resisting the Pope that would set Bishops in his Kingdom without his consent Epist. 13. He tells Solomon King of Hungary that his Kingdom is the propriety of the Church of Rome devoted to it by King Stephen and reproveth him for diminishing the Roman Kingdom by accepting Hungary as from the Germans and exhorts him to repent and amend Epist. 18. He again threatneth the King of France to cut off from the Church both him and all that give him any Regal Honour or Obedience O heinous crime to keep the 5th Commandment and Rom. 13. 1 2 3. And that this excommunication shall be oft confirmed upon St. Peter's Altar Epist. 28. He suspends quantum in se the Arch-Bishop of Breme as an Enemy to the
Eutychian and having shewed you what work both the heretical and hereticating Bishops and Council made in the world about not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Nature and the condemning of dead men I shall next shew you what work they made also about the words One Operation and One Will or Two Operations and Two Wills Reader Wouldst thou think that there were venom enough in one of these words to poyson almost all the Bishops in the world with the Plagues of Heresie or Heretication and Contention § 2. The old Controversie still keeping the Churches all in pieces some being for two Natures after Union and for the Calcedon Council and others against it and but for one Nature after Union Cyrus Bishop of Alexandria was told that it would unite them all if they would confess One Operation and One Will in Christ or at least lay by the talk of One and Two and use the words Dei virilis Operatio The Operation and Will of God-man CXCVII He therefore called a Synod at Alexandria in which this was decreed called Satisfaction For they said that Dei virilis signified two Natures and so they thought they had at last hit the way of concord which neither the General Council of Ephes. 1. Ephes. 2. Constant. 2. Calcedon Constant. 3. had found out but all set the Bishops but more by the ears Cyrus sent his Decrees to Sergius Bishop of Constantinople Sophronius Bishop of Ierusalem persuaded the silencing of the names of One or Two Operations or Wills Sergius sent the Case to Honorius to Rome Honorius rationally persuaded them to use neither the one word nor the other One or Two foreseeing that a new quarrel was arising in these words and little knowing how for this he was by General Councils to be Hereticated when he was dead persuaded them to a silent Peace It is but few Popes that were so wise and peaceable and this one must be a Heretick for it or General Councils be fallible and much worse § 3. Because knowing the effect of the old unhealed Cause I foresee that such men will go near to Hereticate me also when I am dead for condemning Hereticating Incendiaries in the Nestorian Eutychian and Monothelite quarrels I will recite the words of Binnius himself who saith the same that I have said from the beginning though I justifie him not from self-contradiction Tom. 2. p. 992. Honorius fearing which after came to pass and which he knew had fallen out in former Ages about the word Homoousion ☜ and many others lest that Contention should grow to some great Schism and seeing withall that Faith might be safe without these words he was willing to reconcile both Opinions and withall to take out of the way the matter of Scandal and Contention Writing therefore to Sergius he advised him to abstain from the word One Operation lest they should seem with Eutyches to assert but One Nature in Christ and yet to forbear the word Two Operations lest with Nestorius they seemed to assert Two Persons A Slander contrary to his words I again say If all the Hereticating Bishops and Councils had followed this discretion and moderation O what had the Church escaped Yet they are fain to stretch their wits to excuse his words elsewhere Unde Unam Voluntatem fatemur Domini nostri Iesu Christi But it 's certain that in some sense it is One and in another sense Two § 4. The Emperor Heraclius interessed himself in the Controversie Binnius saith by the fraud of Anastasius Patriarch of the Iacobites he was deceived Animo defend●ndi Concilium Calcedonense The Iacobites were Eutychians the greatest enemies of the Calcedon Council and it 's strange then how they deceived him to defend it by destroying it But saith he While he besides his place and office by the persuasion of the Devil was wholly taken up in defending questions of Faith by his own judgment c. Here you may see what the Papists Clergy would make of Kings and all Lay-men If they be wholly taken up in defending questions of Faith by their own judgment they pronounce them to be persuaded to it by the Devil Error is from the Devil but sollicitous searching after the defence of Truth is liker to be of God But they must not do it by their own judgment By whose then By the Bishops no doubt What Bishops General Councils And had not the Emperors long enough followed Councils and banished such as they condemned till while they almost all condemned one another the world was scandalized at the odious Divisions and Cruelties of the Church But must they follow Bishops without using their own judgments about the Case What as their meer Executioners Must the Princes of the world act as Brutes or Idiots or Lictors Was this the old Doctrine Let every Soul be subject to the higher Power c § 5. CXCVIII. King Sisenandus the second that had all Spain called a Council at Toletum of all his Kingdom An. 633. of 70 Bishops who made many good Canons for Faith Order and Reformation the last is a large defence of the King against Rebellion But they order that when a King is dead the Prime Men of the whole Nation with the Priests by common consent chuse another that retaining the Concord of Unity there should be no strife through Force or Ambition And they decree the Excommunicating of wicked Kings that live in great sin which I doubt whether the fifth Commandment forbid them not to have done it being a purposed dishonour § 6. CXCIX Another at Toletum was called 636 by King Chintillane which went the same way Kings were Rulers here and not Popes § 7. CC. Another at Toletum An. 638. by the same King to the same purposes § 8. The Emperor Heraclius published an Edict for the Monothelite Opinion called his Echtesis and Sergius Const. joined in it § 9. Sergius dyeth and Pyrrhus a Monothelite succeedeth him § 10. Severinus is chosen Pope but being not Confirmed as was usual by the Emperor's consent he is plundered of his wealth § 11. The Saracene Arabians conquer Persia and the Eastern parts of the Empire § 12. Sergius before his death called a Council at Constantinople which confirmed the Emperor's Faith and the Monothelite Opinion § 13. An. 640. Iohn 4th was made Pope who condemned the Emperor's Echtesis and it 's said the Emperor disowned it and said that Sergius made it and desired it might be published in his name § 14. Heraclius dyeth Constantine succeedeth him and dyeth in 4 months Heracleo succeedeth After six months the Senate depose him and cut off his Nose and cut out his Mother's Tongue on suspicion that they poysoned Constantine whose Son Constans is next set up § 15. Pyrrhus thought guilty of Constantine's death flieth into Africa and Paulus a Monothelite hath his place Pyrrhus seemeth converted by Maximus in Africa cometh to Rome and is owned by the Pope against Paulus
their Wives is expresly renounced and it is decreed that no Priest be required to separate from his Wife so be it they abstain at Fasts and necessary Seasons nor any Priest endured to put away his Wife on pretence of piety else he must be deposed § 51. Another is the 16th Canon that maketh Deacons like Overseers of the Poor § 52. The 22d is a hard Canon that Bishops and Priests ordained with money and not by examination and election be deposed and they that ordained them § 53. The 36th Canon displeaseth them also which confess the Church of Constantinople's Priviledges as equal with Rome § 54. The 38th Canon containeth one great cause of the old Confusions viz. That whatever alteration the Imperial Power makes on any City the Ecclesiastical Order also follow it Did God make this Law Are not as many Souls in a Town that 's no City as capable of being a Church as Citizens It is in the Princes power to make and unmake Cities May he accordingly make or unmake Churches What if a King will have but one City in his Kingdom must there be no more Churches or Bishops What if there be no Cities as in many American and Arabian Countries must there be no Churches What if the King will disfranchize most of the Cities and another will make every Market Town a City must Churches be altered accordingly If so O that our King would make us so many Cities as the work and the souls of Men need true Bishops that one might not have a thousand Parishes without any subordinate Bishop But if this hold the Emperor might have taken down Rome and set up Constantinople or any other at pleasure § 55. Can. 50. Forbad Clergy and Laity to play at Dice on pain of Deposition or Segregation And Can. 51. forbids going to Shews Jesters Stage-Plays Huntings The 55th Canon commands the Church of Rome to amend their Customs and not to fast on Sabbath-days Can. 62. Forbids Womens Publick Dancings and Mens and Womens together and their putting on Masquers or Players Apparel or Persons c. Can. 63. Commandeth the burning of false Histories of the Martyrs as tending to bringing Religion into reproach continual joyful Praises to God and holy Exercises and to use no Horse-Races c. The 67th Canon is against eating Blood Can. 72. Nullifieth Marriage with Hereticks Alas good Bishops did you think the Papists would have Hereticated you as Monothelites and nullified all Marriages with you by this Canon But two Hereticks Marriage is not null Can. 78. Commandeth all the illuminate baptized to learn the Belief and every Friday to say it to the Bishop and Presbyters How many Parishes or hundred Parishes had the Bishop then to hear Not so many as ours § 56. The 82 Canon offends the Papists forbidding the Picture of a Lamb to be made for Christ as the Lamb of God The 90th Canon is an old one Not to kneel on any Lord's-day and that this begin on the evening before P. 155. Binnius reproveth them for calling Cyprian Archbishop and he proveth that Africa then had no Archbishop or Primate § 57. CCXXII An. 693. was another Toletan Council called by King Egica Before it the King writeth a Sermon for them wherein he tells them That every Parish that have twelve Families must have their proper Governor But if less it must be part of anothers charge § 58. CCXXIII. An. 694. was another Toletan Council under the same King Egica One would wonder that the Legislative vertue of the Church should be continued to such fertility and multitude of Laws as must follow if in all Countries there be every year a Council How great must the Volumes of Laws be at last Binnius in his Notes on this Council tell us That though Paul would have the believing Husband or Wife stay with the Unbeliever in hope of Conversion yet many hundred years experience hath taught us the contrary that it tendeth rather to hurt than good and therefore now it must be otherwise and they must separate § 59. CCXXIV. Even to those days the number of Pagans and Infidels in most Countries was the greatest and the care of good men was to convert them And therefore we read still of so many baptized at age A Council at Utrecht decreed Willebrood or Willifrid and Suibert being Leaders that the best Preachers should be sent from the Neighbor Churches to convert the Heathens that was better work than striving who should be chief or raging about hard words § 60. CCXXV. A Synod at Aquileia An. 698. condemned the 5th General Council at Constantinople for condemning the tria Capitula of the Council of Calcedon O what Concord Councils caused § 61. Pope Sergius refusing to own the Council of Constant. at Trul. under Iustinian 2d the Emperor commanded that he should be brought Prisoner to Constantinople The Soldiers of Ravenna Sergius having paid them the 100 l. of Gold hearing of it rose up and rescued him and made the Emperor's Officer in fear beg for his life By such Obedience Rome kept up § 62. Tiberius the 2d deposed Iustinian the 2d and cut off his Nose and banished him Iustinian was restored and exposed Tiberius to scorn and killed him and banished Bishop Callinicus to Rome for unfaithfulness to his Prince Iohn the 6th was now Pope § 63. Iohn the 7th is made Pope another Council at Toletum under King Witiza I pass by he was a Greek CCXXVI He gather'd a Synod at Rome to debate Iustinian's Order for the receiving the Trull Concil And our English Willifrid accused by his King was here justified as a Son of that Church And a Synod in England received him when the King was dead § 64. Sisumius made Pope lived but 20 days and Constantine succeeded him who was sent for to Constantinople and honoured by Iustinian § 65. About this time An. 708. Spain was conquered by the Saracens Binnius saith Because King Witiza forsook the See of Rome By which we still see that Rome was forsaken even by the best Church such as Spain then was and was not the Ruler of the World § 66. Bardanes Philippicus by Rebellion deposed Iustinian and was made Emperor and within two years was so used himself by Anastasius his eyes put out and he banished § 67. CCXXVII The Emperor Philippicus and Iob. Constant. called General Council at Constantinople I may well call it General when Binnius saith There were innumerable Bishops which is not said of any other Council They all condemned the 6th General Council and their Opinion of two Wills and two Operations Where it is manifest 1. How great a part of the Church regarded not the Authority of Rome 2. Nor thought a General Council infallible when innumerable Bishops are against both 3. And how strong the Monothelite Party was 4. And alas how bad too many Bishops that can change as fast as Emperors will have them For saith Binnius after Baronius Thus at the
of the Apostolick Seat that the Kingdom was translated from Chilperic to Pepin the foresaid Historians do so expresly say that it 's a wonder with what front the innovating Hereticks dare call it in question Lastly It is here to be noted that it was by this same Pope Zachary that the nomination or postulation of Bishops for the vacant Churches in his Kingdom was granted to King Pepin Therefore if elsewhere you read that the Kings of France give Bishops to the Churches remember that it is not done by their own Right but by the Grant of the Apostolick Seat In vain therefore do the innovating Hereticks glory in this Argument who endeavor to subject the Church to Kings So far Binnius after Baronius § 12. From this Story and these words let the Reader think how to answer these Questions Quest. 1. Had not Kings need to take heed of making any one man too great if greatness and exercise of Government give him so much right to the Kingdom Qu. 2. Had not Kings need to look to their manners for their Crowns sake as well as their Souls if Lust Sensuality and Dulness forfeit their Kingdoms Qu. 3. Did not Wars and weakning of the Empire make a great change with Popes when they that were set up and banished at the Emperor's pleasure can now first depose the Emperor in the West for being against Images and Persecuting and then can translate the Crown of France Qu. 4. Was not an ambitious Pope a fit Tool for Pepin and his Confederates to work by to put a pious gloss on their Conspiracy Qu. 5. Did not the Pope rise thus by serving the turns of Conspirators and of Princes in their quarrels with one another Qu. 6. Are Subjects Judges when a King's Sins make him unworthy of the Crown Qu. 7. Yea is the Pope Judge and hath he power to depose Kings if he judge them such Sinners and unfit for Government Qu. 8. Is it a good Reason that a King is justly deposed because Good Men and Holy Bishops are the Desirers and Promoters of it Qu. 9. Would not this Reason have served Maximus against Gratian Was it not Cromwel's Plea If he had but had the Pope and People on his side you see how it would have gone Qu. 10. Is it the mark of an Innovating Heretick to say that the Church should be subject to Kings when Paul and Peter said it of all Christians so long ago Qu. 11. Is it a Note that Protestants love Rebellion because they are against Popes deposing Kings Or is there any heed to be taken of the words of impudent Revilers that dare speak before God and Man at this rate Is deposing Kings the Papists freedom from Rebellion and is our opposing it a character of Rebels Qu. 12. Is it any wonder that Bishop Burchardus desired it and that Bishop Boniface executed the Pope's command who had been translated from England by him to such dignity and had sworn Obedience and Service to him Qu. 13. Is it any wonder that the Pope made these Bishops Saints Qu. 14. I hope they were really godly Men But is it any wonder that some good Men at such a time as that did think it had been for the interest of Religion to have all Power in the Clergies hands especially being themselves Bishops that were to have so great a share How few Bishops are afraid of too much power or ever do refuse it Qu. 15. If the King of France had his Kingdom by the Pope's gift what wonder if he had the power of nominating Bishops also by his gift Qu. 16. Whether he that hath power to give hath not power to take away and be not Judge when the Cause is just Qu. 17. With what face do Papists at once make these claims and yet profess Loyalty to Kings Qu. 18. Whether it concern not Kings to understand on what terms they stand with the Pope and his Clergy that must not be subject to them but have power to depose them Qu. 19. If there be any Party among them that hath more Loyal Principles is it a sign of the concord of their Church that agreeth not in matter of so great moment Or a proof that the Pope is the infallible Judge of Controversies that will not determine so great a Point on which the Peace of Kingdoms doth depend § 13. About the same time they persuaded Rachis King of the Longobards Successor to Luitprand for the love of Religion to lay down his Crown and go into a Monastery so that Monasteries are places for the worst and the best some too bad to reign and some too good lest they should over-master the Clergy § 14. It may be you will think that this Pope Zachary and his sworn Vassal St. Boniface were some very profound Divines that could by their wisdom and piety thus master Kingdoms Doubtless they were zealous Adversaries to Heresies except their own and Successors of the Hereticating and Damning Fathers For Epist. 10. Bin. p. 206 207 208. Zachary writeth to Boniface to expel Virgilius from the Church and Priesthood for holding Antipodes viz. that Sun-shine and Moon-light and Men are under the Earth as well as here which we call over it The words are De perversa autem iniqua doctrina quae contra Dominum Animamsuam locutus est si clarificatum fuerit ita eum confiteri quod alius mundus alii homines sub terra sint seu Sol Luna hunc habito Concilio ab Ecclesia pelle Sacerdotii honore privatum That is But as to the perverse and unjust Doctrine which he hath spoken against the Lord and his own Soul if it be made clear that he so confesseth that under the Earth there is another world and other Men and Sun and Moon call a Council and depriving him of the honour of Priesthood drive him out of the Church That by another world is meant Antipodes or the other side of the Earth inhabited is doubtless § 15. Qu. 1. Did God make Popes to be the Governors of the Antipodes for so many hundred years before they knew that there was any Antipodes And when they excommunicated and silenced those that affirmed it Qu. 2. Were these Popes and Bishops Men of such wisdom as were fit to hereticate Dissenters as they did Qu. 3. Do we not see here what some Councils were and did in those times Qu. 4. Do we not see what Heresie signified at Rome and how little heed there was to be taken of their outcry against some Heresies Qu. 5. Whether was all the World or all the West bound to avoid Communion after with Virgilius Qu. 6. Do we not see here of what Infallibility the Pope is in judging of matters of Faith and how happy the World is to have such a Judge and of what credit his Heretications and Excommunications are Qu. 7. Do we not see how Religion hath been depraved and dishonoured by the Pope and his Clergy calling
Apostates that it hath no shew of an uninterrupted Succession to boast of § 26. Tit. 4. c. 7. He claimeth Authority to absolve Men from Oaths and all Obligations made by the violence and constraint of bad Men and so absolveth the Archbishop of Triers A wicked Decree for Perjury As if in materia licita a Man that sweareth for Fear were not bound And as if Man had not Free-will when he is under Fear § 27. C. 6. 8. He decreeth that none can judge the Pope nor retract his Judgments nor judge of them contrary to many General Councils He curseth from Christ all that contemn the Pope's Opinions Mandates Interdicts Sanctions Decrees c. ● 9. Yet he saith that the Church of Rome may change and mend its own Mistakes and Decrees n. 10. ' Tit. 5. C. 1. No Custom may occasion the removal of any thing established by full Papal Authority C. 2. Other mens works approved or reprobate by the Pope's Decrees must accordingly be judged accepted or rejected C. 3. They that have not the Decrees are to be reproved c. § 28. Tit. 6. He brings down Emperors and Kings sufficiently below the Priests confining them to temporal things and not to judge of Priests Tit. 7. He rebuketh the King for letting none be Bishops but those that he liked charging him to admit none at Colen or Triers till the Pope had notice And before he told Emperors that they must take no care what kind of Lords the Priests be but what they say of the Lord nor to note what Popes be but what they do for correction of the Churches For they are by Constantine called Gods and God must not be judged of men Tit. 3. c. 3. He questions whether Lotharius was to be called a King because he was an Adulterer § 29. Tit. 8. c. 1. He decreeth that no Bishops be ordained but by the election or consent of the Clergy and People C. 3. That Primates and Patriarchs have no Priviledges above other Bishops but so much as the Canons give and ancient custom hath conferred § 30. Tit. 11. c. 1. Is this Nullus missam Presbyteri audiat quem scit concubinam habere aut subintroductam mulierem That is Let no one hear the Mass of that Presbyter whom he knoweth undoubtedly to have a Concubine or a Woman subintroduced C. 2. If Priests fall into the snare of Fornication and the act of the crime be manifest or shewed they cannot have the honour of Priesthood according to the authority of Canonical Institution Yet our Canons will condemn him that refuseth to take such an one for the Guide of his Soul or to hear him Yet Can. 5. he saith That we must receive the Sacrament from any Priest how polluted soever and by the judgment of how many Bishops soever he be Reprobated because bad men administring good things hurt none but themselves and all things are purged by faith in Christ. Tit. 14. Lay-men must not judge of the lives of Priests nor so much as search into them § 31. CCLXIV An. 858. A Council at Constantinople placed Photius in the place of Ignatius of which before and more anon Ignatius is banished we have not the History and Reasons of the Council § 32. CCLXV. An. 869. A Council was called at Tullum of the Bishops of twelve Provinces by King Charles where besides other Clergy-mens miscarriages Wenilo Archbishop of Sens was accused of Treasonable Defection by the King In which it's pity that Bishops below the Pope should have or pretend to the Power which the King doth intimate in these words Bin. p. 798. From which my consecration or sublimity of Kingdom I ought not to be supplanted or cast down by any one without the hearing and judgment of the Bishops by whose Ministry I was consecrated King and who are called the Throne of God in which God sitteth and by whom he decreeth his judgments to whose fatherly Correptions and castigatory Iudgments I was ready to subject my self and at present am subject You see here to what power over Kings the common Bishops as well as the Pope were got by pretence of representing Christ and of the Power of the Keys § 33. CCLXVI. An. 859. A Council at Constantinople condemned Ignatius and again confirmed Photius who with the Emperor Michael sent to the Pope to satisfie him of all and profess enmity to Image-breakers § 34. CCLXVII An. 860. In a Council at Confluence the five present Kings of the French Line came to an agreement § 35. CCLXVIII A General Council was held at Constantinople An. 861. where 318 Bishops the same number that was at the first Nicene Council deposed Ignatius and setled Photius to which the Pope's Legates also subscribed the Papists say through fear so that it was Papally confirmed And yet here was much done for Images § 36. CCLXIX The Pope having condemned Iohn Archbishop of Revenna who despised him till the Emperor forsook him in a Council at Rome he submitted himself to the Pope and was reconciled § 37. CCLXX. An. 862. In another Council at Rome Pope Nicolas condemned the Heresie of the Theopaschites that they said made the Godhead to suffer it 's like it was Cyril and the Eutychians old verbal Error by communication of Titles § 38. CCLXXI. An. 862. A Council is held at Aquisgrane in which King Lotharius desireth counsel about his Wife Theutperge the Bishops pronounce it his duty to put her away she having confessed Incest with her own Brother and allow him to marry Waldrade he professing himself unable to contain The Pope condemneth the action and them The Papists say this was but a forged pretence I only note 1. If they would deliberately forge so heinous a thing on a Queen what Heathens could be worse than such Bishops 2. Did the Bishops of that age think that they were bound to obey the judgment of the Pope who thus opposed him § 39. CCLXXII An. 862. In another Council in France in Villa ad sublonarias the three Kings again met for agreement § 40. CCLXXIII Lotharius appealing desireth a Council in France by the Pope's consent All the Bishops of France and Germany meet at Metz and the Pope's Legates with them They and the Legates also subscribe to the King's Divorce and to more which the Pope had before declared against Did Bishops then think the Pope Infallible or not to be opposed The Papists say that the Pope's Legates were bribed § 41. CCLXXIV An. 863. The Pope calleth his own Council at Rome and excommunicateth or curseth them all from Christ and deposeth them quantum in se. But yet offereth forgiveness to all save two if they will subject themselves to him The Bishops stand to it that he cursed them unjustly Must all the Kingdoms be thus ruled and confounded by one Priest till matters between a King and his Wife be managed to his will and satisfaction § 42. CCLXXV In another Council at Rome An. 863.
into a Theatre of Contention and a Field of War § 65. Yet here is one thing further to be noted viz. the foresaid Contention that rose about the Bulgarians These two great Patriarchs of Rome and Constantinople were neither of them yet great enough or satisfied with their jurisdiction their desires being more boundless than Alexander's for the Empire nothing less than all the world will satisfie one of them at least Nicetas saith it was by Famine and a Treaty and kind words of the Emperor that the Bulgarians turned Christians Some Papists would give the honour to the Pope without proof and cannot tell us any thing how the Pope converted them But when they were converted they sent to Rome for some Instructors The 〈…〉 them two and they received them But they put the case themselves to the Council at Constantinople Whether they were to be under the Bishop of Rome or of Constantinople The matter held a great debate The Pope's Legates pleaded that they had already received Bishops from Rome c. The Greeks pleaded that their Countrey was part of the Empire and under the Bishop of Constantinople till they conquered it and that they found there Greek Churches and Bishops who were still there and the Conquest did not translate them from the Bishop of Constant. to Rome How the Controversie ended is hard to know Some say that the Council gave them to the Pope and some say otherwise But this is confessed that this Roman ambition so greatly displeased the new Emperor Basilius that it turned him after against the Pope and inclined him the more to restore Photius which he did when Ignatius was dead § 66. Here I would call the Reader to consider whether the Pope's Universal Government was in those days believed even by that Council which was supposed to be partial by the Emperor's inducement on the Pope's side What place else could there be for such a strife whether the Bulgarians were under the Government of the Bishop of Rome or Constantinople if all the World were under the Bishop of Rome They will say that it was only questioned whose Diocess or Patriarchate they were under But Rome never pretended that they were of that Diocess or Patriarchate as anciently divided But the question was Whose Government they were now fallen under And would any dispute whether e. g. Westminster were under the Government of the King or of the Lord Mayor of London when all the Kingdom is under the King This Controversie clearly sheweth that the Church then took the Pope to have but the first Seat and Voice in Councils but not to be the Governor beyond his circuit § 67. It is here also to be noted that Basil the Emperor's revolt from the Pope was so great that Hadrian is put to write sharply to him as accusing the Bishops of Rome and derogating from them admonishing him to repent but we find not that this changed his mind § 68. Yet one thing more is here to be observed In the life of Hadrian the 2d Bin. p. 882. we find that the Pope taking the advantage of Basil's present state and mind and the interest of Ignatius much depending on him sent a new Libel to be subscribed by all the Bishops before they should be permitted to sit in Council The Greek Bishops grudged at this and complained to the Emperor That the Church of Constantinople by these offered Libels was brought under the power of Rome by the doubtfulness of Subscriptions But though flebiliter conqueruntur they complain with tears the Emperor was angry with them and would have it and some Bishops non sine magno laboris periculo libellos quidem vix tandem recipiunt with much ado were brought to subscribe saying It was novum inauditum The refusers extra Synodum inglorii relicti sunt were shut out till they conformed Oh! that Inglorii was a cutting word § 69. The Emperor hiding his anger against the Pope's Legates for the Bulgarian Usurpation gave them great gifts and sent them home But at Sea they fell into the hands of the Sclavonians who stripped them of their Riches and the Subscriptions and Copy of the Council and kept them Prisoners and threatned their Lives But by the mediation of the Emperor and Pope they were delivered and had some of their Writings again § 70. CCLXXXV An. 879. Carolus Calvus King of France unjustly possessed the Kingdom of Lotharius which by inheritance fell to Ludovicus Ludovicus got the Pope to interpose who sent his Legates to Charles But the Bishops had not yet learned to obey Popes against Kings in power A Council of Bishops called at Metz give the Kingdom to Charles because he was the stronger This was called Concilium Praedatorium a Council of Robbers and Traytors And no wonder when Bishops must be the Givers of Kingdoms Was it not enough for the Pope to usurp such power to be over Kings and dispose of Crowns but ordinary Bishops must do the like § 71. CCLXXXVI Yet another Council against the Pope King Charles had authorized Northman a great man to receive some Goods that were taken to belong to the Church The Pope commandeth Hincmarus Bishop of Rhemes and the rest of the Bishops of France to excommunicate Northman Hincmarus and the Bishops refuse to obey him only one Hincmarus Bishop of Laon Laudunum obeyeth him and publisheth the Excommunication A Council is called at Werm●ria where Hincmarus Rhem. and the Bishops the King consenting condemn Hincmarus Laudunensis for disobeying his Metropolitan in obeying the Pope He appeals to Rome They will not let him go He writeth Hiucmarus Rhem. writeth largely against him though his Nephew shewing how he broke the Canons how bad a man he was how he had neglected his own Charge left Children unbaptized and for private quarrels excommunicated his Flock and had silenced and suspended the Ministers under him tyranically c. Reader Was the Pope's power yet fully received when a Metropolitan was to be obeyed before him and men condemned for obeying him § 72. CCLXXXVII Yet more sorrow An. 870. a Council is called in Villa A●tiniaco Attigny I will give you the Story in the very words of Binnius translated When Hincmarus Bishop of Laon for the cause in the foresaid Council expressed had got the Rescript of Pope Adrian on his behalf and had notified it to Hincmarus Rhemensis and to King Charles both of them in hatred to the Bishop of Laon decreed That this Synod called Latrocinalis should be called There presided in it Remigius Lugdunensis Ardovicus Vesontiensis Bertulsus Trevirensis with their subject Bishops Herein Hincmarus Rhemensis with King Charles was the accuser of his Nephew Hincmarus whom he had before consecrated Bishop of Laon. The Action brought against him was That he had by Counter-writings defended the rights of the Apostolick Seat which the Archbishop of Rhemes did endeavor to impugn and overthrow And that contrary to his Oath of
his kindred disregarding the honour of God and the Dignity of the Romane Seat which Errour saith he he so Traditioned or delivered down that it remaineth to this day This is Romane Tradition a Comet then appear'd Famine Pestelence Earthquakes which were thought to be for the Pride and rapacity of the Pope and his contempt of God and Man So Platina § 76. An Instance was given of a Bishop of the contrary Spirit Adel●ert Bishop of Prague in Bohemia●ound ●ound the People so contrury to him and bad that he forsook them and Travelled first and then entred into a Monastery And when he had lived there five years the people desired him again and promised Obedience A Council at Rome desired his return vvhich with grief he did But they still proved incorrigble and he again forsook them and vvent to Preach to the Hungarians when he Bapzed the King Stephen and did much good Bin. p. 1071. § 77. CCCXX Arnulphus Arch-Bishop of Rhemes suspected of Treason for delivering up the City of Rhemes to Charles Called a Synod at Seulis to purge himself Excommunicating them that did it Anno 990. § 78. CCCXXI. Hugo Capet having now got the Crown of France and desirous to destroy all the Carolines line upon the aforesaid suspition got a Synod at Rhemes to cast out Arnulphus a Bastard of that Lin● saying a Bastard must not be a Bishop One Bishop refused The rest for fear of that King consented and cast him out so constant were the French Bishops § 79. CCCXXII Six Bishops and Nine Presbyters and Four Deacons made a Council at Rome to Canonize Vdalric Bishop of Augusta Anno 993. upon the reports of his Holiness and Miracles Here let me at once tell the Reader that he hath no cause to think the most of these Canonizations wholly causeless But that while Pope and Patriarcks confounded all by wickedness and contentious pride God had many faithful Bishops and Presbyters that lived holily in quieter and privater kind of Life And the Popes that would not endure themselves to live a Godly life thought it their honour to have such in the Church that did and to magnify them when dead and past contradicting them Just like the Pharisees Mat. 23. that killed the living Servants of God and honoured the dead and built them Monuments saying If we had lived in those days we would not have killed them § 80. CCCXXIII A Synod was called at Moson to debate the Case between Arnulph and Gerbert substituted at Rhemes who so pleaded his cause that it was put off to another Synod Baron revileth some Writings ascribed to the former Synod at Rhemes saying they were this Gerberts as being Blasphemous against the Pope The Centuriators of Magdeb. mention them at large Did Rome then govern all the World § 81. CCCXXIV Another Council is called at Rhemes and Gerbert that wrote so Blasphemously against the Pope is deposed by the Popes means and Arnulphus restored which Gerbert observing flyeth to the Emperour to Germany seemeth to repent as Baron but surmizeth and gets higher to be Pope himself by the Emperours means as you shall hear anon § 2. Can any Man think that Popes that themselves came in by Tyranny and meer Force and lived in Wickedness could have so great a Zeal as is pretended to do Justice for all others unless for their own ends § 83. Iohn the 16th alias 17 is passed over by Binius Onuphrius saith that he Reigned four Months Platina saith he died the tenth Year and sixth Month and tenth Day a great difference § 84. Gregory the 5th is next made Pope saith Plat. by Otho 3d his Authority for Affinity But saith Plat. The Romans make Crescentius Consul with chief Power who presently made John Bishop of Placentine Pope who came to it by the consent of the Roman Clergy and People to whom the choice belonged though some leave him out Otho cometh to defend his own Pope Crescentius fortifieth City and Castle against him The People dare not resist but open the City Gates Crescentius and Pope John flyeth to the Castle and in hope of Pardon yields Crescentius is Killed by the People in his passage John hath first his Eyes put out and then his Life and Gregory the Eleventh Month is restored Binius saith that Johns Hands were cut off his Ears cut off and his Eyes pulled out and after set on an Ass holding the Tail in his Hand was carried about the Streets § 85. This Pope and Otho the 3d. agreed to settle the Election of the Emperour as now it is on the 7. Electors The cause of great Confusions and Calamities was that the Emperours did not dwell at Rome and so left Popes then to fight strive and sin that else would have lived submissively under them Constantine Carolus Mag. or Otho might have done much to prevent or cure all this The Papists would fain prove this the work of a Roman Synod to settle the Electors that they may prove that it is they that must make and unmake Emperours But they can shew us no such Council Onuphrius hath written a Treatise to prove that this was after done by Greg. 10th For which Binius reprehends him as believing Aventinus But this is a Controversy handled by so many that I shall refer the Reader to them and whether the seven Electors only or all the Feudatories chose Baronius and Binius maintain that all came from the Authority of the Pope that Greg. 5th Ordained the choice of the Emperour to be by all the Feudatories of the Empire that the Council at Lyons under Innocent 4th setled it upon Seven but not all the same that are now Electors and that the Princes after setled it on these same Seven they know not who nor when For the right understanding of many such matters I only mind the Reader of this one thing that as the contention of Princes and the superstitious fear of Anathematizing had made the Papal and Prelatical Power then very great in setting up and taking down Princes so it was usual for their Assemblies even those called Councils to be mixt of Men Secular and Clergy Kings and Princes and Lords being present with the Bishops as in our Parliaments and usually the greatest Princes ruled all Therefore to ascribe all to the Pope and Prelates that was done in such conventions and thence to gather their power to dispose of Empires and Kingdoms is meer deceit § 86. Platina next nameth Iohn 17th alias 18th but saith he was no true Pope its impossible to know who was but that he corrupted Crescentius with money and it cost them both their lives How he was mangled shamed and killed though a Bishop before you heard before § 87. Next an 999. cometh that French Bishop Gerbert before mentioned that wrote so blasphemously as they called it against the Pope as Aeneas Silvius after did till he saw some hope of being Pope himself by the Emperor's favour first made Arch-Bishop
were no Popes 4. And if it be but necessary for the future all that after were otherwise chosen were no Popes 5. If several wayes and parties or powers making Popes may all make them true Popes then who knoweth which and how many of those there are and which is the true Pope if ten were made at once ten several wayes 6. This confesseth that Christ hath appointed no way for choosing Popes nor given any sort of men power to choose them else what need Pope Nicholas begin it now anew And if so it seemeth that Christ never instituted the Papacy For can we suppose him so Laxe a Legislator as to say a Pope shall be made and never tell us who shall have power to do it Then England may choose one and France another and Spain another c. the Bishops one the Priests another the Prince another and the Citizens another But if Christ have setled a Pope-making power in any it is either the same as Pope Nicholas did in Cardinal Bishops or not If not the Pope changeth Christ's institution If yea then all those were no Popes that were otherwise chosen and so where is the Roman Church and its succession 7. What power hath Pope Nicholas to bind his successors Have not they as much power as he and so to undo it all again If the King should decree that his Kingdom hereafter shall not be hereditary but elective and that the Bishops should be the choosers of the King were this obligatory against the right of his heirs 8. By this decree if the Laity and Clerks consent not after he is still no Pope § 23. In this same Council saith Bin. ibid. it was decreed that no one hear the Mass of a Presbyter whom he knoweth undoubtedly to have a Concubine or Subintroduced Woman Quaer Whether they that make him a Schismatick that goeth from a scandalous wicked malignant or utterly insufficient Priest and dare not commit the care of his soul to such a one be not looser than Pope Nicholas and this Roman Council was § 24. A Council at Malphia and another at Paris for Crowning King Philip and one at Iacca in Spain of small moment § 25. An. 1061. Was the 22d Schism or two Popes of Rome for five years continuance The Cardinal Bishops for fear of the Emperor chose one that was great with him Anselm Bishop of Luca but the Italian Princes perswaded the Emperor that it was a wrong to them and him and chose Cadolus Palavicinus Bishop of Parma called Honorius the 2d The Sword was to determinate who was the true Pope Cadolus came with an Army to Rome the Romans came out against him and in the Fields called Nero's a great battle saith Platina was fought in which many of both sides f●ll but Cadolus was driven away He shortly returned with a great Army being called by a part of the Romans that were men of pleasure and by force seized on the Suburbs and St. Peter's Church But the Souldiers of Gotifred put his Souldiers to flight and he himself narrowly scaped the Prefect of Rome's Son with him breaking through the Romans got possession of the Tower where they besieged him till they forced him to yield and buy his liberty of the besiegers for 300 pound of Silver Then the Bishop of Colen having the education of the young Emperor came to Rome to rebuke Alexander as an Usurper but by Hildebrand was so overcome that the choice belonged not to the Emperor that he called a Council which confirmed Alexander and deposed Honorius The Emperor consented on condition that Cadolus be pardoned and Gibert his promoter Chancellor of Parma made Arch-Bishop of Ravenna which the Pope consented to and did Thus then were Popes and Bishops made Q. How shall we be sure for Cadolus's five years who was the Pope § 26. A woman called Mathildis a Countess was then the great Patroness of the Papacy who furnished military Hildebrand that did all with Souldiers to conquer several Great Men that opposed them and to set up Alexander and defend him § 27. This Pope Alexander is said by Bin. and Baron to judge King Harold of England an Usurper to dispose of the Crown to William of Normandy and declare him lawful Successor and send him a Banner that he might fight for it and possess it Thus did this Prelate give Crowns and Kingdoms as the supreme judge made by himself He after required Rent Peter-Pence from England of William § 28. He made some constitutions for his old Church at Milan Three thing are the summe of them and many other Councils 1. Against Simonie 2. Against the Clergies fornication no Canons cured them of either of these 3. That no Lay-Man judge any Clerk for his crimes only if Priests live in fornication he alloweth Lay-Men to tell the Arch-Bishops and if they will do nothing then to withhold their duties and benefits till they amend But this Binnius noteth was but a temporary extraordinary concession for the hatred that this Pope had to fornicating Clergy-Men But if they did but now and then lie with a woman by chance and did not obstinately still keep them they must not so trouble them § 29. CCCXLV. The foresaid Cadolus or Honorius 2d was setled Pope by a Council at Basil An. 1061. where say some many Simoniacal incontinent wicked Bishops decreed that no Pope should be made but out of Italy which they called Paradise that is Lombardy § 30. CCCXLVI A Council at Osborium An. 1062. contrarily condemned him and set up Alexander Though before Platina saith that Cisalpini omnes all on the Romans side of the Alpes obeyed Honorius except Mathildis a good woman § 31. Here Binnius thought a Dialogue of Pet. Damian worthy to be inserted to prove that Princes may not make Bishops of Rome In which he would prove that the Decrees that gave the Emperor such power may be changed because God doth not alwaies perform his own word for want of mans duty And he saith that some men have been sinners and perished for obeying Gods own Law and some rewarded for breaking it which he proveth by a profane quibble 1. In Iudas as if Christs words what thou dost do quickly had been a command to do the thing 2. In the Rechabites that drank not Wine when Ieremy bade them As if Gods Command to Ieremy to try them had been his Command to them to do it A Council was at Arragon in Spain for we know not what § 32. CCCXLVII An. 1063. Peter Bishop of Florence being accused of Heresie and Simony and deposed a Council at Rome renewed Pope Nicolas 2d's Canons not to hear Masse of a Priest that liveth with a Concubine or introduced woman To excommunicate Simoniacks c. § 33. CCCXLVII In a Council at Mantua to quiet some that yet took Cadolus's part and accused Pope Alexander of Simony Alexander is owned and Cadolus not appearing cast out who after tryed it
so much as his Beard in his own power in which nature hath given him a propriety How much more might the Pope then command all mens purses 4. May way we not see here on what weighty reasons these men condemn God's word of insufficiency and plead for traditions and a necessity of their additional Laws When Scripture hath left out the shaving of mens Beards and we had never had such a Law if such power as the Papal had not made it O what discord and disorder would there be in the Church if we had not so necessary a government and what confusion would toleration introduce if mens Beards were left at liberty But if Paul called the heathen Phylosophy Vain and Science falsly so named 1 Tim. 6. 20. as befooling the world with pedantick trifling and calling them off from their great concernes may we not say then that this is vain Government and Order falsly so named which thus calleth the Church from its primitive purity simplicity and unity when Christians were known by loving one another to these childish games that the Prelates and Priests of the Catholick Church must be known by their being without Beards One would suspect this had its original from Pope Ioane if there were indeed such a person and that it is a Symbol of the Churches sex as it is called Our Mother or at least that Marozia or Theodora instituted it 5. And do you know which were the more inexcusable for silencing and persecuting the preachers of the Gospel The Iews that did it because they thought it took down Gods Law and would bring the Roman Power on them Or the Roman heathens that thought the Gospel destroyed the worship of their forefathers Gods or the Roman Papists that silenced and persecuted men for wearing Beards 1 Thes. 2. 16. § 56. Epist. 11. When some French Preachers had revived Religion in Sweden the Pope desirous to reap where they had sowed sends to the King of Sweden to tell him his joy and that what the French taught them they recieved from Rome and to desire him to send one of his Bishops to Rome to acquaint him with their customs and to receive his Laws and Mandates You see by what means Rome was raised Epist. 15. A Bishop gave up his Bishoprick The Pope chides him and commands him to a Monastery Rather than do so he returneth to his seat again The Pope chargeth him with the Idololatriae scelus the Crime of Idolatry for not obeying him and writes to them not to recieve him or be ruled by him as ever they loved the Grace of God and St. Peter The like he doth Epist. 16. by the disobedient Bishop of Narbon and Epist. 17. by the disobedient Arch Bishop of Rhemes and Epist. 18. 19 20. of the same and all this in St. Peter's name Yea Epist. 20. he requireth the King of France Philip to joyn against the Arch-bishop of Rhemes as excommunicate as ever he would have St. Peter's Grace because his Kingdom and his Soul were in St. Peter's power And it is no wonder that they that believe that the Pope is St. Peter's Vicar and Secretary and that their souls are in his power will give him all their Lands or Kingdoms to save their souls § 57. When the Pope sentenced the Emperor Henry to be excommunicate and deposed and was charged to have done this without authority he wrote his 21 Epist. l. 8. to the Bishop of Metz to prove that he had power to do it and to absolve his Subjects from their Oaths of fidelity saying that the Scriptures were full of certain documents to prove it And his certain documents are Tibi dabo Claves c. and Feed my Sheep And Kings are not excepted They are St. Peter ' s Sheep Bin. p. 1262. he saith that the Head of Priests is at the right hand of God but who knoweth not that Kings and Dukes had their beginning from them that knew not God and affected by blind lust and intolerable presumption to domineer over others the Devil the Prince of the world acting them in Pride Rapines Perfidiousness Murders and all wickedness who while they would have the Priests of the LORD to stoop to their footsteps are rightlyest compared to him who is head of all the Sons of pride who said even to Christ All this will I give thee if thou wilt fall down and worship me Who doubteth but that the Priests of Christ are the Fathers and Masters of Kings and Princes and of all the faithful And is it not notorious miserable madness for a Scholar to endeavour to subjugate his Master and a Son his Father and by wrongful obligations to subject him to his power by whom he believeth that he may be bound or loosed both in Earth and Heaven Did not Pope Innocent excommunicate Arcadius the Emperor and Pope Zachary depose from his Kingdom the King of France not so much for his iniquities as because he was not meet for so great power placed Pepin in his stead and absolved all the French from the Oath of fidelity Ambrose sheweth that Gold is not so much more pretious than Lead as the Priestly Dignity is higher than the Kingly Power Pag. 1263. Yea even the exorcists have power over Devils How much more over those that are Subject to the Devils and are his members And if the exorcist excel so much how much more the Priests And every King when he cometh to his end doth humbly and pitifully beg the Priests help that he may scape the prison of Hell and Darkness and at the judgment of God be found absolved But is there either Priest or Lay-man that when he is dying begs help of the King for the saving of his soul What King or Emperor can by his Office take a soul by baptism from the power of the Devil and number him with the Sons of God and fortifie him with holy Chrism And which is the greatest thing in the Christian Religion can with his own mouth make Christs body and blood Or which of them can bind and loose in Heaven and earth By all which it may be plainly gathered by how great power the sacerdot al dignity excelleth Which of them can ordain one Clerk in the holy Church How much less can they depose him for any fault For in orders exclesiastical to depose is an act of greater power than to ordain For Bishops may ordain Bishops but in no wise depose them without the authority of the Apostolick seat Who then that hath any knowledg can doubt but that Priests are preferred before Kings In a word we must know that all good Christians are more fitly Kings than evil Princes For these by seeking the Glory of God do strenuously rule themselves But the other seeking their own and being enemies to themselves do tyrannically oppress others These good Christians are the body of Christ. The other bad Princes are the body of the Devil These so rule themselves as that they shall
not temporal estates under them to take any oath of allegiance or fidelity to any Lay-man The 44. is to invalidate Lay-Ruler's Laws about ecclesiastical matters as Glebes Mortuaries c. the rest I pass by § 196. In this Council besides the Albigenses and Abbot Ioachim Almaricus a learned man was condemned they say he said that All Christians were Christs members and they add how truly is doubtfull suffered by the Iews with him that Christ's body was no more in the sacrament than in another thing That Incense as offered in the Church is Idolatry That every Christian is bound to believe that he is a member of Christ That if Adam had not sinned there should have been no generating in Paradise nor difference of sexes We must take these things on the report of such as Sanders with some other that they charge on him for which when they had killed him with grief they dig'd up his corps and burnt it as they were then burning multitudes of the living § 197. In this Council Stephen Laughton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury was deposed for taking part with the Barons of England against King Iohn whose case was now become the Pope's when he had given him his Kingdom in so much that when the Arch-Bishop confessed and begged absolution his Holiness answered By St. Peter Brother thou shalt not so easily get absolution who hast done so many and so great injuries not only to the K. of England but to the Church of Rome § 198. Let the Reader note that 1. General Councils are the Papists religion 2. That this is one of their greatest approved General Councils 3. That therefore by their Law and Religion they are bound to exterminate all Protestants and that all Princes must be deposed that will not execute it and their dominion given to others that will 4. That all Protestants and others called Hereticks are dead men in Law and want but judgment and execution where their Law is in force 5. That the Henrician heresie is one that is judged such by their Councils 6. That therefore not only all Protestant Kings but all Papists that are for the safety and power of Kings against the Popes pretended power of condemning and deposing them are Hereticks to be exterminated and burnt by many Canons 7. Therefore Kings are beholden to the Protestant reformation disabling the Pope to execute his Laws and Religion for their Crowns and lives 8. That when ever any King or others set up Popery and the power of their Laws and Councils in a Kingdom that is reformed the subjects are presently dead men in Law being to be destroyed as Hereticks though Policy or want of power may hinder the execution 9. Qu. Whether it be lawful for any King or in his authority so to destroy his Kingdom or to make all or the generality of his subjects dead men in Law 10. Whether by these Laws the Pope and his consenting Bishops have not published themselves to be hostes Regum et Regnorum if not humani generis and are not so to be esteemed § 199. Note also that D. Heylin in his Certamen Epistolare against me answereth that it is not Kings but temporal Lords that are mentioned in this Council and that he and Bishop Taylor and Bishop Gunning and Bishop Pearson in their dispute published by Terret or Iohnson and others before them have maintained that these Canons were but proposed by Pope Innocent and not consented to and passed by the Council But to the first It is clear 1. that by Domini Temporales Councils ordinarily mean Emperors and Kings as well as any others 2. That the words of the Council are express eâdem nihilominus lege servatâ circa eos qui non habent Domin●s principales And to the 2d I answer 1. The Church of Rome actually taketh this for one of their approved General Councils and will not be beholden to our Bishops for their friendly favour and excuse And therefore it is all one to us whether the Council consented or not 2. Mr. Henry Dodwel in his late considerations how far Papists may be trusted by Princes c. pag. 167 pag. 174 c. hath fully answered all the reasons given by these Bishops as Terret did in part before and hath added abundant proof that these Canons were passed in that Council 1. From the Council at Oxford where Stephen Laughton himself was 2. From Mat Paris who is alledged for the contrary 3 From Gregory 9th's decertals 4 From the case of Iohn Blunt elect Bishop of Canterbury recited by Mat. Paris an 1233. 5. From Otto the Pope's Legate in M. Paris an 1237. and that London Council 6. From the Popes Letter to Otto an 1238 in M. Paris 7. From Honorius the 3d's condemnation of Rich. de Marisco Bishop of Durham 8. From P. Clement the 5th's Bull for King Philip the Fair. 9. From the Council of Tarragon 10. From the Council at Vienna under Clement 4th 11. From the General Council at Lyons under Gregory 10th 12. From the Sabine Council in Spain 13. From a Council at Toled● under Benedict 12th 14. And from the Council of Trent 15. From the Common sense of the Case of Abbot Ioachim 16. And of the word Transubstantiation 17. And of annual confession All taken as setled by this Council So that as the Papists will not accept of this Charity of our Bishops in excusing their Religion from this part of guilt so there is little place indeed for an excuse § 200. The Papists themselves though they have many other Councils and instances to prove the Popes Claim and Practice of deposing Princes yet will not let go this as being a famous General Council But when here in England they would excuse their Religion from Rebellion they use to say that this being not an Article of Faith but a Canon of Practice they are not bound to take it as infallible To which the said Mr. Henry Dodwell ibid. pag. 185. hath largely answered to which I refer the Reader adding only that That which must be Believed to be of God is not alway matter of practice yet what must be done as by the wi● of God must alwaies be first the matter of faith we must believe that it is God's will before we can obey it as his will The full answer see as aforecited § 201. In the performance of the Laws of this Council multitudes called hereticks were burnt Their St. Dominick preaching to the people to perswade them to take arms under the Sign of the Cross to destroy the Hereticks for to get pardon of their sins so that from first to last many hundred thousand some say two millions but that seemeth too much were killed in France Savoy Germany Italy and other Countreys see Sam. Clerk Martyrol and Arch-Bishop Vsher de●success Eccles Thus hath Papal Rome been built and maintained by Blood Rebellion and Confusion under pretence of Church Purity Unity and Government and all by
Church Whence did this timerity befal thee It were better that thou advanced and honoured by God should honour those which are zealous for God even when they are dead Henceforth God will give thee no more power over me I wrote to thee in the spirit of humility and love that thou shouldst correct thy many errours But with a proud eye and a bewitching heart thou hast despised wholesome warnings Wo to thee that despispest Shalt thou not be despised And the Bishop Robert departing striking as with a lance the Pope who when as is said he was pricked groaned aloud he left him half dead and with a mournful voice groaning with sighs His Chamberlains hearing him being astonished asked him what the matter was The Pope answering with sighs and groans said The terrours of the night have vehemently troubled me nor shall I ever be well again as I was Oh alas how great is the pain of my side A ghost hath pierced me with a lance An he neither eat nor drank that day feigning that he was inflamed with feavours that streightened his breath And Gods revenge and wrath did not so leave him Not long after the Pope not sensible of Gods warnings by his Servants but setting about warlike and secular matters he prospered not in them though he laid out great care and labour and cost But Wars yea the Lord of hosts being against him his army which at great charges he had sent against the Apulians under the conduct of his Nephew William being scattered conquered and confounded perished with their Captain mortally wounded They say there were there slain of Souldiours and valiant stipendiary's of the Pope four thousand men And the whole Countrey of the Romans lamented the shedding of so much Christian blood The Pope then went to Naples though weakened as with a plurisie in his side or as wounded with a lance And Cardinal Albus physick could not help him For Robert of Lincoln spared not Sin●bald of Genoa And he that would not hear him warning him when alive felt him peircing him when dead Nor did the Pope ever after enjoy one good day till night nor one good night till day but sleepless and molested Thus M. Paris § 200. M. Paris p. 896 anno 1254. saith that Henry the third of England obliged himself and his Kingdome unjustly to the Pope under pain of being disinherited to pay all the treasure which the Pope should lay out in his War for the King that is to have made him King of Sicily And that the Pope having no mercy on England prodigally wasted its money but those vast sums got by rapine were all lost § 201. The same Author saith p. 897. that when Pope Innocent lay dying after the stroke of the Bishop of Lincoln and the loss of his Army and his followers lay crying about him he opened his dying eyes and said what do you mourn for you wretches Do I not leave you all rich what would you have more And so he died § 202. CCCCXLIV Anno 1245. Innoncent calls a Council called General their 13th Approved at Lyons of 140 Bishops where he heaped up accusations against the Emperour whom Thaddaeus his agent defended And at last pronounced himself an excommunication and deposition absolving all his Subjects from their Oaths and Allegiance and excommunicating all that should own and help him Here you see that more than one of their approved General Councils are for Rebellion and perjury and the Popes deposing Christian Emperours In the same Council sad Complaints were made from England of the pillaging or woful impoverishing of the land by the Pope and King but the Pope heard all silently and would give no answer § 203. At this Council the Pope importuned the Electors to choose another Emperour some refused and stuck to the Emperour saying that it belonged not to the Pope to make or unmake Emperours Others obeyed him and set up Henry of Hassia But the Emperour while he lived kept up his possession so far as to make the Pope repent and saith Trithemius was a weary of his life But all Germany Italy c. were confounded by the schim or contention one half as is aforesaid called Guelphes following the Pope and Henry the other called Gibelines cleaving to the Emperour Frederick to the shedding of abundance of Christians blood and the desolation of Countreys and the shame of Papal tyranny § 204. Anno 1254. Alexander the 4th was Pope Matth. Paris tells us of a terrible dream that he had of Pope Innocents damnation or misery But the fault of his writing is that he was too credulous of dreams and visions He tells us also of twenty Miracles done at Lincoln for the sake of the late Bishop Robert And that at a Parliament in London the greatest which hath been seen all the Nobles Ecclesiastical and Civil demanded of the King that the choice of the Lord Chief Iustice the Lord Chancellor and the Lord Treasurer should be in the Parliament or their common Council as of old was usual and just and that they should not be removed without notorious faults which the Kings secret Councellours perswaded him to deny Prelates and Nobles being grieved by exactions express it c. § 205. Here the said Monk Matth. Paris exclaimeth O the steril solicitude of the Roman Court their blind ambition Though holy yet often deceived by the Council of bad men Why dost thou not learn to moderate by the bridle of discretion thy violence being taught by thing past and so often chastised by experience In thy losses we are all punished c. Thou now endeavourest to make two German Emperours which must cost inestimable treasure whence soever taken and both uncertain of the dignity c. § 206. At that time the Lords and Prelates of England crying out of the King Hen. 3d. as false and oppressive and pillaging Churches and People to maintain his profuseness the Bishop of Hereford laid a Plot which the King accepted that getting the hands and seals of a few Bishops he would go to Rome and get power from the Pope to gather the King as much money as he needed So to Rome he went and there found the Pope in great grief and care himself for money to pay vast debts that his Wars had cost him The Bishop told him that the King who had engaged his Kingdom to be forfeited if he paid not the Popes debts would help him to money if he would be ruled by him and write to the Bishops and Churches to grant the King such help as they could well do The Pope gladly gave leave to the Bishop to write what he would And home he went and Eustandus a Legate was sent from Rome to see all done saith M. Paris p. 911. anno 1255. The Legate was prepared and ready in all things to the destruction of all England to obey the will of the King which was tyrannical and to bind the oppressed contradictors in the
having power to take away Kingdoms and all that men have § 41 42. The Siege of Rome Two Popes Gregory's death § 42. He threatneth to depose the King of France claims Hungary c. § 23. Binnius record of THE POPES DICTATES telling in 27 Articles WHAT POPERY IS § 44. He claimeth Spain § 46 and Dalmatia § 49. A great part of the Bishops against him § 49. Pronounceth unsincere repentance fruitless § 50. Denyeth Divine Service in the Sclavonian tongue § 51. Ill weather imputed to the ill Lives of Priests The Armenians errours what § 51. Apulia c. the Popes § 51. One man turned an hundred thousand men in Spain from the Pope He threatneth to Excommunicate and depose the King of Spain as an Enemy to the Christian Religion § 52. He newly found St. Matthews body § 54. He will expose the Prince of Sardinia unless he obey him in making all Priests shave their beards § 55. Notes hereon The French convert the Sweeds and the Pope would reap the fruit § 56. His notable Epistle to prove Popes Priests and Exorcists above Kings § 57. Answered § 58. Peter pence § 59. An Arch-bishop suspended for not visiting Rome § 60. A pious Lie for Peace is a sin § 61. The old Spanish Liturgy partly contrary to the Christian Faith till now § 62. His respect to William the Conquerour c. § 64 66. The German Bishops hereticate the Pope for forbidding Marriage § 67. Matthew is forsaken § 68. Philip King of France and many great Bishops excommunicate § 69. Divers Councils excommunicating contrarily the Antipopes § 69 to 74. Ordinations null that are made pretio precibus vel obsequio and not by the common consent of Clergy and People § 75. He excommunicateth the Greek Emperour usurping § 76. The Greek affairs summ'd up § 77. The power of Pope and Bishops to depose Kings § 79. A Council Character of Gregory § 80. A Council make Loyalty to be Haeresis Henriciana § 87. The Disciple is not above his Master answered § 87. Wecilo's heresie that men obey not unjust Excommunications but may by others be received § 88. The 23d Schism § 91. Victor's Soldiers conquer Clement's § 92. Lay Princes presentations or Investitures are Heresie every Heretick is an Infidel It 's better be without visible Communion than have it with such § 93. Consectaries overthrowing Rome ib. A new Pope marrieth Mathildis to Welpho on condition they use not carnal Copulation § 94. A Jerusalem expedition causeth peace at home Conrade rebelleth against his Father § 94. The Emperour commits Fornication § 101 103. Wrongs on Monday Wednesday or Thursday no breach of holy peace No Bishop or Priest must swear or promise Allegiance to a King nor take Preferment from any Lay-man § 104. None to communicate in one kind § 105. All the Bishops of England save Rochester renounce obedience and society with Anselme Archbishop of Canterbury because he would not renounce the Pope saying he blasphemed the King setting up any in his Kingdom without his consent § 106. Time given the King of England to repent § 109. The Anti-Pope Clement digg'd up and burnt Paschal 2. Council Decree that all Bishops of the Henrician Heresie Loyalists if alive be deposed if dead digg'd up and burnt that is most of the Western Bishops § 112. The Schism continued § 113. The Pope set up young Henry against his Father who taketh him Prisoner to the death He keeps his Fathers Corps five years unburied because Excommunicate Yet proveth Hereticus Henricianus Imprisoneth the Pope till he grant him Investitures The Pope absolveth himself § 114 115. Cases on Binnius § 116. Note that Investitures supposed the People and Clergies free choice of Bishops § 117. The Bishops usage of old Henry to the last § 118. To take the Popes Excommunications as not obligatory is a Heresie § 119. The dangerous Doctrine of Fluentius Bishop of Florence that Anti-Christ was come § 120. Only the Church made Henry rebell § 121 122. Tybur coloured with bloud The Earl of Millans Flesh given to Dogs The Popes sacramental Covenant broken § 127. God will have no involuntary service § 129. The same is a Henrician Heresie in others which is none in the Pope § 132. He may forswear for the People of God § 132. Two Popes contending and excommunicating The Emperour giveth up Investitures § 135 to 138. Four Doctrines of Guilb Porretane condemned in Council 1. That Divinitas and Deus are not the same in signification 2. That the three Persons are not unum aliquid 3. That there are eternal Relations besides the Persons 4. That it was not the Divine Nature that was incarnate Two more Popes § 138 142. A Preacher murdered at Rome § 144. Two more Popes the succession from the wrong § 145. They fight for it § 146. How Clergy and People first lost their Votes in choice of Popes § 147. Two Popes still striving § 149 c. Many Castles in England built by two Bishops § 160. Abailard condemned unheard § 161. Caelestine II. the first Pope without the Peoples election An. 1143. Rome against the Pope Bishops are his strength § 168. Porretane again accused and puzzled the Council § 170. He is again accused by Bernard whom the Cardinals accuse for writing his Faith and getting Bishops hands to it § 171. The Romane people excommunicate by Pope Adrian 4. They are for a Preacher called by him an heretick § 174. Rome fighteth with Pope and Emperour They fight again and expel the Pope § 174. The 27 pair of Popes Wars between the Emperour Frederick and Pope The Crown of England held as from the Pope Yet Rome receiveth him not The Emperour submitteth being deserted c. § 175. The setling the choice of Popes by Cardinals The Pope no Bishop by the Canons § 177. The Roman Succession is from Alex. 3. when the Clergie People Emperour Princes and a Council of innumerable Bishops were for Victor § 176. Parliaments called Councils § 179. Ireland the Popes § 180. The Albigenses Henricians § 181. No Bishop may suspend a Presbyter without the judgment of his Chapter A perjured Clergie-man perpetually deprived Doubtful words to be understood as usually § 182. The Popes Party in Rome have their Eyes put out § 183. Frederick drowned in Asia § 187. The Kingdom of France interdicted § 190. The Pope seus up an Anti-Emperour who prevaileth § 192. England interdicted six years and three months § 194. The famous twelfth General Council at the Laterane under Inoc. 3. for Transubstantiation exterminating hereticks deposing Princes absolving Subjects forbidding unlicensed Preachers c. § 195. Almaricus burnt dead § 196. Stephen Langton and King John § 197. Ten Queries upon this Council § 198. The Canons of this Council true Mr. Dodwel's 17 Arguments for it § 199. The Papists excuses answered § 180. misnumbred The bloody Execution § 181. Oxford Canons that every great Parish have two or three Presbyters c. § 183.
of Christ that hate the Doctrine and Life and Cross of Christ that by pleading for Godliness and Concord may be the effectual Enemies of both and may fight against Christ in his own Livery under his Colours and with his own Arms. Whose God is their Belly who glory in their shame who mind earthly things being Enemies to the Cross of Christ The History of whom you will find in the following part of this Treatise § 40. But here I must above all remember the Reader that he is not for this Corruption of the Clergy and Government of the Church to think that the Church here ceased to be a true Church or that the Ministry was lost or that it became unlawful to hold Communion with any such Churches much less to think hardly of Christianity it self as if it were no better than false Religions because so many of its Pastors were so bad None of God's Counsels were frustrate by mans sin None of his Promises to his Church have failed For all this Christ is the Saviour of the World the Prince of Righteousness and Peace that came to destroy the Works of the Devil and to save his people from their Sins and all that are given him of the Father shall come to him and he will cast none of them out nor shall any take them out of his hands § 41. I. Let it be still remembred that as the Chronicles of Kingdoms mention only the publick Actions of Princes and great Men but name not the poor and private sort so also our Church-History of Councils and publick things say little of godly private Christians but of Patriarchs and great Prelates who yet are themselves but a very small part of the Christian World II. Note also that every Bishop had many Presbyters whose work was not to strive for superiority nor trouble the world in Councils where usually they came not and so had not a quarter of the temptations that the Bishops had And though we find mention sometimes of the Presbyters also that were naught yet the number so reproved and proved bad is not proportionable to the number of Prelates compared among themselves that miscarried in Councils The Presbyters that staid at home and followed their work in private with the Flock and came not on the Stage in publick affairs kept up the substance and practice of Religion III. And the private Christians had yet less temptation and were not so overwhelmed with worldly things nor carryed away by pride and ambition and covetousness as the ruling party were IV. And the Monks and other retired Christians that saw the Prelates sin and s●ares though many of them had their failings too yet no doubt kept up much serious piety and a holy life V. And no doubt but very many of the Bishops themselves were humble holy faithful men that grieved for the miscarriages of the rest Though such excellent persons as Gregory Neocesareae Gregory Nazianzen Gregory Nyssen Basil Chrysostome Augustine Hillary Prosper Fulgentius c. were not very common no doubt but there were many that wrote not Books nor came so much into the notice of the world but avoided contentious and factious Stirs that quietly and honestly conducted the Flocks in the ways of piety love and justice And some of them as S. Martin separated from the Councils and Communion of the prevailing turbulent sort of the Prelates to signifie their disowning of their sins VI. And oft times when the Prelates were at the worst God raised up some very Godly Princes that maintained Religion more than the Clergy and were an honour to it when the Bishops dishonoured it VII And it is not to be contemned that much piety was kept up among great numbers of Christians whom for some mistake the rest reviled and condemned as Schismaticks or Hereticks Little know we how many holy souls were among those that are in Epiphanius Catalogue Of the Audians and some others he seemeth to confess as much himself The Novatians were tolerated in almost all the Empire and had their Churches and Bishops having the testimony of the Orthodox that they were usually of sound faith and upright lives and stricter than other Christians were And God pardoneth the infirmity of a small mistake in judgment when men are sincerely addicted to his service Now and then a cruel Prelate did prosecute them but so did not the gentler sort as Atticus Proclus c. at Constantinople c. nor the Emperours themselves save when so instigated VIII And though the Churches in the Roman Empire kept up this grandure of Patriarchs Metropolitans and rich Prelates that after over-topped Kings it was not so in other parts of the Christian world but the Clergy lived more humbly and quietly The Scots under Columban●s and their other Presbyters long lived in great piety without any Bishops And when the Scots Presbyters Finan Aidan c. ordained Bishops in Northumberland they were commonly humble holy men like themselves And both Scots and Britains so much misliked the Romane-grandure and way that when Augustine the Monk came in they would not subject themselves to the Pope or any Foreign Prelates nor so much as eat and drink with the Missionaries And the like we may say of some other Extra-imperial Churches The Spaniards themselves not only while Arian Goths of whom see the testimony of Salvian to the shame of the Orthodox but after Recaredus days for many ages lived in great quietness while Italy France and Germany were employed in Hereticating Cursing Excommunicating or bloudy Wars The great Empire of A●assia as the crediblest History saith never had Bishops to this day but only one called the A●u●● while the whole Clergy are exercised though in too much ignorance in their Priestly Office Brocardus that lived at Ierusalem testifieth that those Eastern Christians called by the Papists Nestorians Iacobites Eutychians were commonly plain honest Religious people free from Heresie and of better lives than even the Religious of the Church of Rome and that there were not worse men at Ierusalem than the Roma● Catholicks The Armenians have many Bishops and one chief but live though too ignorantly and superstitiously yet in great austerity of life IX In all ages since Prelacy swelled to the corruption of the Churches and annoyance of the Peace of Kings and Kingdoms there have been still a great number of pious lamenters of the Corruptions of the Church that have groaned and prayed for reformation Insomuch that Dr. Field maintaineth that even in the Church of Rome there have been still considerable numbers of Doctors that owned truth and piety and misliked the Papal usurpations and errours The Waldenses and Albigenses exceeding numerous said they had continued from the Apostles and so from the days of Sylvester or Constantine had dissented from the Roman pride and corruptions And God hath made the Protestant Churches since the Reformation as his Vineyard where truth and piety have prospered though Satan hath been still at work
the Pretor stand at the Tribunal of the Bishop and to morrow the Bishop may be called to the Pretors Bar That an Earthly judge may take and punish the servants of the highest judge and consecrated men who will not say that this is most absurd Answ. This sheweth what Church-grandure and power these men expect If they have not the Civil power and be not Magistrates or Lords of all the Church is wronged This Clergy-pride is it that hath set the World on fire and will not consent that it be quenched 1. By this rule all Christians should be from under all Power of Kings and Civil Rulers For are they not all the servants of the highest Iudges Hath God no Servants but the Clergy 2. By this rule both Princes and People should be free from the Bishops judgment For are not these Bishops Men as well as Princes and are not Christian Princes and People the servan●●s of the highest Iudge and therefore should not be judged by Bishops 3. But what a wicked rebellious doctrine is intimated in the distinction that Princes are Earthly Iudges and Prelates are the servants of the highest Iudge Are not Prelates Earthly Iudges as well as Princes in that they are men that judge on Earth And are not Princes Judges of Divine appointment and authority as well as Prelates Yea and their power more past all dispute 4. And what absurdity is it that every soul be subject to the higher power And that he that 's one of your Sheep in one respect may be your Ruler in another Why may not the King be the Ruler of him that is his Physician or his Tutor And why not of him that is his Priest Was not Solomon Ruler of Abiathar when he displaced him May not one man judge who is fit or unfit for Church Communion and another judge who is punishable by the sword Did Christ come to set up a Ministry instead of a Magistracy He that saith Man who made me a Judge came not to put down Judges He that saith By me Kings reign came not to put down all Kings Obj. Christ sets up a Kingdome of Priests or a Royal Priesthood Answ. But his Kingdom is not of this World or Worldly It is a spiritual Kingdome conquering sin and Satan putting down the World out of our hearts and making us hope for the everlasting Kingdom which we shall shortly enjoy The Disease of the Disciples that strove who should be greatest and sit at the right and left hand and said Lord wilt thou at this time restore the Kingdom to Israel hath prevailed after all this warning on a Worldly Clergy to the great calamity of the Church And what wonder when even then St. Paul saith All seek their own too much and none the things of Iesus Christ so naturally as Timothy did and so zealously as they ought Too many Popes haue been Peters Successours in the Character given him Mat. 16. Get thee behind me Satan Thou art an offence unto me For thou savourest not the things that be of God but those that be of men I understood not who were the spring of our late Fifth-Monarchy mens diseases till I read Campanella de Regno Dei and some such Papists where I see that Christs reign by his Vicar the Pope over all the Princes and People of the World is the true Fifth-Monarchy Heresie For which they bring the same Prophecies as the Millenaries do for their Expectations Obj. But the Pope Prelates and Clergy called the Church are not to reign by deposing Kings but by Ruling them and being above them As Love is above the Law which yet is made for the ungodly that want Love and must be ruled by fear so Princes are for the World of unbelievers but not for the Church and Spiritual persons who live above them in the life of Love Answ. 1. This was one of the first Heresies which the Apostles wrote against Many tempted Christians then to think that Christianity freed them from service and subjection and made all equal But how plainly frequently and earnestly do Paul and Peter condemn it Is it not a shame to hear such Papists as cry up such a Heresie as this cry down and damn a Nestorian or an Eutychian or a Monothelite for an unskilful use of a word Paul saith He that teacheth otherwise against subjection is proud knowing nothing but doting 2. Love doth indeed set us above Fear and Legal threats so far as it prevaileth But it is imperfect in all and Fear still necessary 3. And this taketh not down either the Law or Magistracy to us but only maketh us less need such means It 's one thing to love and live so holily and justly as never to need or fall under the sword of Magistrates and another thing to be freed from subjection and obligation This increaseth in many the opinion that the Papal Kingdom is Antichristian in that they set up themselves above Rulers that are called Gods 3. But why must this priviledge extend to the Clergy only Have not other Christians as much holy love and spirituality as most of them And must Princes rule only Infidels Some suspect none as inclining to Popery but those that take up some of their Doctrines of Transubstantiation Purgatory Images c. But they that on pretence of the raising of the Church and defending its power do first call the Clergy only the Church and then seek to make themselves the Lords of Princes by the pretences of an Excommunicating Power and plead themselves from under them and take it for their priviledges to be free from subjection to them and their penal Laws are doubtless levened with that Popish Heresie which hath done much of all the mischiefs which the forecited History describeth § 50. CXXXI Besides some little contention at Alexandria under Proterius before he was murdered the next in Binnius is said to be at Angices Andegavens● which saith over again some of their old Canons against Priests living with Women and removing from place to place and such like And the Papists say that this Council was to contradict the Emperour Valentinians Law and to vindicate the rights of the Church as not being lyable to Civil Judicatures or under Kings § 51. CXXXII Anno 45. 3. A French Venetick Council was called about Ordinations which repealed some former Canons and was so strict that the first Canon kept Murderers and False Witnesses from the Sacrament till they repented instead of hanging them And the second Canon denyed the Communion to Adulterers that unlawfully put away their Wives and took others O strict Laws § 52. CXXXIII Ann. 459. A Council at Constantinople forb●d Simony § 53. CXXXIV Ann. 467. A Council at Rome of 48 Bishops decreed that men that had two Wives or the Husbands of Whores should not be ordained That they that could not ●ead and they that were mai●ed or dismembred or the Penitent should not be made Ministers c. § 54. CXXXV Ann.
their several places they may practice this the guilt being proved I may tell him that I have no rule over I will have no Communion with you But I cannot thereby oblige all others to do the like This Gelasius also oft Epist. ad Anastas Imperat. c. setteth up the Priest above the Prince as Gods Laws are above mans As if Kings were were not to Govern by Gods Laws and as if the Bishops Canons were not mans Laws if they be Laws § 62. CXL It 's said that 70 Bishops at Rome under Gelasius determined of the Canon of the Scripture and also of accepted and rejected Books In the Canon they put a Book called Ordo Historiarum with one Book of Tobias one of Iudith one of the Maccabees Nehemias is lest out Among the approved Books the Epistle of Leo to Flavian Const. is thus imposed The Text whereof if any man shall dispute even to one iota or tittle and doth not venerably receive it in all things let him be accursed A multitude of heretical and rejected Books are named Eighteen pretended to be by or of some Apostles and such other And among others the History of Eusebius yet before approved unless here he mean only de vita Const. The Works of Tertullian Lactantius Arnobius Clemens Alexand. Africanus Cassianus Victorinus Pictav Faustus Rhegiens c. Of the Canon of Scripture Bishop Cousins hath collected the true History from greater Antiquity § 63. CXLI Vitalis and Misenus the Popes Legates at Constantinople having been Excommunicated for Communicating with Acacius c. Vitalis dyed so but after eleven years Misenus repented and was absolved by a Council of 55 Bishops might not the Pope alone have done it § 64. CXLII You have heard before how Festus got Laurentius the Arch-presbyter chosen Pope at Rome and more chose Symmachus Theodorick an Arian being King was just and had so much wit as to please the Clergy while his Kingdom was unsettled The Pope under his protection excommunicated both Emperour and Patriarch of Constantinople for Communicating with Hereticks but he never excommunicated Theodorick at home though an Arian There was reason for it Interest is such mens Law But while the Schism between Symmachus and Laurentius divided the Senate the Clergy and the People five or six several Councils are called at Rome mostly to heal this rupture For at first the Laurentians laid some Crimes to the charge of Symmachus and when the Councils would not cast him out they fell to rapine violence and bloodshed many being killed and all in confusion So that it was work enough in three years for King and Council to end the Schism § 65. CXLIII When the Arian Persecution abated in Africa Thrasa●●ndus the King contriving which way to root out the Orthodox without violence he commanded that when any Bishop dyed no other should be ordained in their places Hereupon the Nonconformists seeing the Churches like to decay ann 504. held a Synod in which they decreed and do their that though they suffered death for it they would go on and ordain Office concluding that either the mind of the King would be mollified or else they should have the Crown of Martyrdom This is called Concilium Byzacenum § 66. It is greatly to be noted that many following Councils in Spain France and other parts of Europe which were held under the Gothish Kings were more pious and peaceable than the rest fore-described The Reasons seem to me to be these 1. These Kings being conquering Arians the Bishops durst not damn them for Heresie for fear of their own necks and so were greatly restrained from the hereticating work of Councils 2. These Kings having a narrower Dominion than the Empire and being jealous of their new gotten Conquests were nearer the Bishops and kept them more in awe than the Emperour did 3. And these Councils being small of a few Bishops had no such work for arrogancy and ambition as the great General Councils had 4. And the great proud pretending Patriarchs that set the World in a continual War were not here to strive who should be the greatest The Pope himself was seldom mentioned in the Spanish and French Councils or the African § 67. CXLIV One of these honest Councils is Agathense by the permission of Alaricus by 35 Bishops Casarius Arelatensis being chief Where many Canons for the Clergy were made or repeated The 3d Canon is that if Bishops wrongfully excommunicate any one other Bishops shall receive them Did the Popes observe this with Acacius Euphemius c. Can. 63. If any Citizens on the great solemnities that it Easter the Lords Nativity or Whitsuntide shall neglect to meet where the Bishops are seeing they are set in Cities for Benediction and Communion let them be three years deprived of the Communion of the Church Doth not this prove that the City Churches then met all in one place and so were but one Assembly at those times How else could all the Citizens be with the Bishop at one time But even these Canons forbid Clergy-men to sue any before a Secular Judge or to appear or answer at anothers suit Can. 32. Otherwise both are to be excommunicate Can. 37. It punisheth those that kill men but with denying them Communion Can. 50. Only if a Bishop Presbyter or Deacon commit a Capital crime he shall be deposed and put into a Monastery and have but Lay-communion When Murderers are hang'd and Trayters also quartered this Canon is laid aside I thought a Monastery had been a desirable place and not bad enough to serve Traytors and Murderers instead of the Gallows § 68. CXLV A Council at Apanna under Sigismund King of Burgundy recited such like Canons as the former save that there is one just such as our Fanaticks in England would have made who would not worship God in any Temple which the Papists had used to their Mass so faith Can. 33. The Temples or Churches of Hereticks which we hate with so great execration we despise to apply to holy uses as judging their pollution to be such as cannot be purged away But such as by violence they took from us we may recover This is just Down with the Idolatrous Steeple-houses But if they would give the Nonconformists in England leave to Preach in such places they would be thankful and think God will not impute the sin of others to us § 69. CXLVI A Council at Sidon of 80 Bishops was called by the Emperour Anastasius where they agreed to curse the Council of Calcedon and Flavianus Antioch and Iohan. Paltens were banished for refusing This was about the time when the foresaid Fight was between the Monks and the Antiochians when the Carkasses of the Eutychian Monks were cast into the River § 70. About this time was the fall and rise of the Papacy The fall in that the Eastern Empire made little use of Popes but did their Church work without them Their rise in that the
will say is 1. Let him that is without Error be the first in damning him 2. But it was just with God to leave him to be numbered with Hereticks who was so blindly zealous in executing the Sentences of Hereticating Prelates The Case of Nestorius and many others before § 3. In his time the Indian Auxumites turned to Christ and Iustinian joyfully sent them a Bishop And I take it for more dishonour to the Bishops than to him that Nicephorus saith c. 32. In Pontifices quos admodum de Sodomorum haeresi insanire compererat acerbe seu potius faede Justinianus animadvertit And it is noted ibid. that in a Famine he commanded Flesh to be sold in Lent but the People would dye rather than buy it and break their Customs § 4. CLXVI An. 540. A Council of 25 Bishops at Orleance made some Canons of Discipline The 3d Canon about Ordaining Bishops layeth down the old Rule Qui praeponendus est omnibus ab omnibus eligatur that is of the Clergy and People The Churches yet were no greater than that all the People could join in choosing the Bishop The 10th Canon dissolveth incestuous Marriages made after Baptism but not those made before as if the reason were not the same The 27th Canon finding some too Iewish in keeping the Lord's-day that would not use a Horse or Chariot to carry them nor would dress Meat or do any thing to the adorning of their Houses or themselves forbiddeth only grosser labours which hinder the holy duties of the day § 5. CLXVII The Canones Barcinonenses speak of the order of Liturgy that Clerks must cut their Beards but not shave their Beards and such like § 6. CLXVIII To pass the Concil Byzazenum as having nothing noted of it Anno 541. a Concil Arvernense decreed under King Theodebert one Canon which if practised had been worth many Kingdoms Ca. 2. That no one seek the sacred honour of a Bishop by Votes but by Merits nor seem to get a Divine Office rebus sed moribus and that he ascend to the top of that eminent dignity by the ELECTION of ALL and not by the FAVOR of a FEW That in choosing Priests there be the greatest Care because they should be irreprehensible who must rule in correcting others c. § 7. CLXIX An. 545. Another Council at Orleance under King Childebert among other Orders saith Can. 3. that the Synod forbiddeth the Citizens to celebrate Easter out of the City because they must keep the principal Festivities in the presence of the Bishop where the holy Assembly must be kept But if any have a necessity to go abroad let him ask leave of the Bishop This Canon and many other to the same purpose tell us that then the Infidels were still so many that a Bishop's City-Church could all meet in his presence in one place The 5th Canon decreeth that a Bishop shall be ordained in his own Church which he is to oversee which implieth that then ordinarily there was but one Episcopal Church And indeed it was long before the Countrey meetings were any other than Oratories or Chappels that had no Altars nor any but the Bishops Church Much ado many Councils made to keep Priests and Bishops from Wives and to restrain them from Fornication § 8. CLXX In a Synod at Constantinople An. 547. the business was debated de tribus Capitulis § 9. Here the occasion of this stir must be noted One Theodorus Bishop of Caesar. Cap. was an Eutychian but for his skill in business was great with the Emperor He thought if he could but cast any slur on the Calcedom Council it would justifie their Cause And the Emperor being speaking against the Eutychians or Acephali Theodorus told him that he might easily bring them all in if he would but condemn Theodorus Mopsuestenus and the Writings of Theodoret and the Epistle of Ibas against Cyril which the Council had received it would satisfie them This seemed to the Emperor a happy way of concord the Empress putting him on and so he set himself earnestly to effect it These three men had been accounted Nestorians and two of them had written smartly against Cyril as heretical and turbulent but yet renouncing Nestorius they were received and justified at Calcedon against their Accusers And if one may judge impartially by the Evidence that is left us they seem to have been far wiser and better men than the majority of the Bishops of those times But neither Learning Piety nor soundness in the Faith is any security in such times against Hereticaters that can but get the upper hand and major vote And Ignorance usually is most proud and loud most confident and furious and such can easilier make wise men pass for Hereticks than learn of them to be wise But the final judgment sets a strait When Iustinian was earnestly set upon this Project the Defenders of the Calcedon Council perceived themselves in a difficulty should they condemn these three men they would seem to condemn the Council about which there had been such a stir in the Empire And they should seem to justifie the Eutychians and to strengthen them And if Council were against Council it would dishonour Councils And if they should refuse the Condemnation they would seem to desert Cyril and the first Ephesian Council and perhaps might be called Nestorians but worst of all they should displease the Emperor and might occasion his favouring the Eutychians Therefore they took this prudent course to put off the business to a General Council and to delay till then the Emperors attempts But the Emperor did first publish his Edict in which after the Confession of his Faith and praise of the four Councils he addeth ten Curses Anathematisms according to the Custom and Religion of those times of which the three last are against the tria Capitula or the Councils seeming approbation of the three forenamed men The Bishops resisted a great while but at last were forced to submit § 10. CLXXI. To this purpose Vigilius Romanus had a meeting of about 30 Bishops where Vigilius yielding was called a Desertor as prevaricating to please the Emperor he got them to give in their reasons on both sides in writing and then gave all to the Emperor's party and persuaded the rest to silence and communion till a Council because it was not a Controversie about Faith but about Persons § 11. The Emperor's Party acted by Theodore Caesar got some Bishops to assemble at Mops●est An. 550. to prepare a Condemnation of their former Bishop Theodore by saying that his name was not in their Book § 12. CLXXII King Childebert called another Council at Orleance where many old disciplinary Canons were repeated Among others Can. 9. That no Lay-man be made a Bishop without a years time to learn his Function You may conjecture what Scholars they were then Can. 10. That none get a Bishoprick by gifts or seeking but with the will of the King by
and his Son Sergius were the Captains that had wrought this great deliverance to the Church And now they plead with King Desiderius for St. Peter's Rights as still zealous for the Pope The King is angry with them and jealous of their power and seeketh to destroy them and particularly to set their own Pope against them They get the Citizens to stand by them and the King cometh with an Army The Pope seeing which was like to be the stronger side in great wisdom went out to the King and after some days conference with him sendeth to Christopher to render himself to the King The Citizens hearing this forsook Christopher and Sergius Gratiosus seeing they were deserted by the People through the Pope went out first to the King and Pope and Sergius next and Christopher last The Pope was so kind to them that made him Pope that he made them Monks and put them in Sanctuary in St. Peter's Church to save their lives But they had Adonibezek's justice and were soon drag'd out thence and Christopher's eyes put out of which he dyed But Sergius was awhile a Monk and then thrust in the Laterane Cellar Thus went the matters of the Universal Monarch at Rome § 36. A little before the Pope's death Sergius was fetcht blind out of the Cellar and kill'd the next Pope searcht out the Authors and found them to be Paulus Cubicularius and the last Pope's Brother and other great Men and he prosecuted some of them to Banishment but the Archbishop of Ravenna caused Paul to be killed § 37. It was Adrian a Deacon that was then chosen Pope Son to the chief Man in Rome ablest to effect it Upon these stirs Desiderius desired friendship with the Pope but he demanding the Cities which Pepin had given the Church some of which Desiderius still kept and doing the foresaid justice on the Friends of Desiderius he came with an Army and killed many and took many Cities The Pope urgeth the restitution of all his Cities indeed the Emperor's given him by Pepin he still denieth the Pope gets Charles of France to come with an Army for fear of whom the Longobards flie The Dutchy of Spoletum and other Cities yield themselves to the Pope and as a token of subjection receive tonsure Charles besiegeth Desiderius in Papia and forceth his Brother Carloman's Wife and Children that fled to the Longobards to yield themselves to him while the Siege continued Charles went to Rome and was gloriously entertained by the Pope and renewed to him Pepin's gift of all the Exarchate of Ravenna and many Dukedoms and Cities which were none of his own to give and now the Pope is a Prince indeed And Charles returning to the Siege conquereth Papia taketh King Desiderius and winneth all the Longobards Kingdom And thus Strength gave Right according to the Atheists Opinion now stirring that Right is nothing but a power to get and keep Pepin and Charles make themselves Kings and the Pope a Prince that while they share the Emperor's Dominions between them they might be a strength to one another And Desiderius being himself but an Usurper helped by the Pope into the Throne no wonder if when interest changed the same hand take him down How Charles his Brother Caroloman dyed and why his Wife and Sons fled from Charles to the Longobards and what became of them is not well known § 38. Pope Adrian the 1st thus made a greater Prince than any before him did greater works than they had done and ob nimium amorem Sancti Petri ex inspiratione Divina built many great and stately Buildings made all places about his Palace Baths c. fit for splendid pomp and pleasure and all this from meer self-denial and holiness Many Churches also he repalred and adorned and did many other such good works § 39. This great Adrian was before but a Deacon I have oft marvelled to read that Deacons were so ordinarily then made Popes and sometimes Lay-men when yet the old Canons required an orderly rising through the several degrees It was no wonder that then a Deacon at Rome was a far higher preferment than a Bishop For a Deacon and a Priest might be chosen Pope but a Bishop could not For of old when Diocesses and Parishes were all one the Canons decreed that no Bishop should remove to another Church except being Consecrated by others he never consented nor had possession so that every Bishop must live and dye in the place where he was first Ordained so that Rome Const. Alex. Antioch c. and all the great Seats chose either Deacons Priests or Monks to be their Patriarchs and Bishops No wonder then if as Nazianzen saith Orat. 5. it was the custom to have almost as many Clergy-men in every Church as People in regard of the present Honour and the future hopes of Preferment Indeed he carried it that had the greatest Friends which was as commonly the Deacon as the Priest or Archdeacon By which we may conjecture whether the worthiest Men were made Popes For if they were the worthiest why were they by former Popes never made higher before than Deacons Did not the Popes know the worthiest men And if a breach of the Canons in Elections nullifie the regular Succession by this it is evident that the Roman Seat hath no such Succession § 40. By the way the Reader must note that in all the Writings of the Popish Clergy concerning these matters there are certain terms of Art or Interest which must be understood as followeth viz. 1. Sanctissimus Papa the most Holy Pope signifieth any prosperous Bishop of Rome how wicked soever in his life 2. Rex Pientissimus the most Pious King signifieth a King that took part with the Pope and advanced his Opinions and Interest 3. Imperator Sceleratissimus Haereticus Nefandus c. a most wicked Emperor or Patriarch or any other and abominable Heretick signifieth one that was against the Pope his Interest or Opinion Homo mendaeissimus a Lyar is one that saith what the Papists would not have to be true If you understand them otherwise you are deceived ordinarily § 41. About the death of Paulus Cubicularius and others note that it had long been the way of the Church-Canons to contradict God's great Law for humane safety He that sheddeth Man's blood by Man shall his blood be shed and on pretence of being more merciful than God to entice Murderers Adulterers and all wicked Thieves and Criminals to make up the Church of Christ by decreeing that instead of being Hanged or Beheaded if they would but be Baptized they should but be kept for a time from the Sacrament or do Pennance and what Villain would not then be a Christian § 42. Here ariseth a great Controversie with Sigibert a Monk-Historian and Gratian himself which Baronius and Binnius take up viz. the first say That Charles being at Rome a Council there with Pope Adrian gave him the power of chusing the
of an Hospital to the King and to the Physician May not one rule and punish by the Sword and another by the Word by Teaching and the Church Keys Is it not one thing to Fine and Beat and Banish and Kill a Man and another to sentence him unmeet for Church-Communion Marvellous that God permitteth the world to be deluded by such a blinded or blinding Clergy though as learned as Bellarmine that would make these things seem inconsistent and separate what God hath conjoined See here to what the Roman Clergy would reduce Kings they must be no Governors of the Church And if all the Kingdom be Christians are they not all the Church And so the Christening of the Subjects deposeth the King and maketh the chief Priest King that Christeneth them If he had said that Kings govern Churches but not as Churches but as parts of the Kingdom he had said falsly For they govern them as Churches though not by the same sort of Government as the Pastors do as they govern not Hospitals by the same sort of Government as the Physicians § 129. In Eugenius's Epistle it is honestly and truly said that If there had never been a painted or a forged Image neither Faith Hope nor Love by which Men come to the Eternal Kingdom would have perished I am of Bellarmine's mind now that this was none of the Pope's Epistle but the honest Emperor's and his Clergy Councils He thought it too bad for a Pope and I think it too good for a Pope He thinks that the Pope must be mad if he would have so condemned his Predecessor Adrian's Acts as this Epistle doth and I doubt he was not so honest as to do it But did not Bellarmine know how much more sharp and virulent Accusations Popes have laid on one another § 130. CCXLVI So powerful was Pius's Attempts to reform the Clergy that it drove Pope Eugenius the 2d for shame to call a Council at Rome not from the Antipodes but of 63 Bishops An. 826. who repeated some old Canons and among other things forbad such Feasts and Plays as our Wakes ar● on any Holy-days to be used § 131. Valentine was next chosen Pope Collectis in unum Venerab Episcopis Gloriosis Romanorum Proceribus omnique amplae urbis Populo in Pal. Later saith Anastasius but he lived but 30 or 40 days Historians agree not of it § 132. Gregory the 4th succeeded who saith Platina would not undertake the Papal Office till Ludovicus the Emperor had considered of the choice and confirmed it Which saith Platina Ludovicus did not out of Pride but lest he should lose the Rights of the Empire being by nature gentle and most humane and had ever upheld the Rights of the Church He setled Benefices on every Priest that Poverty might not hinder them You see here that the great Friend of the Church yet took that for the right of the Empire that none should be Pope against his consent § 133. Platina adding how he reformed the Clergy forbidding them gay Attire Ornaments Sumptuousness and Vanities saith thereupon Would thou hadst lived in our times O Ludovicus For the Church wanteth thy holy Institutions and Censure so much hath the Ecclesiastical Order poured out itself to all Luxury and Lust. So describing their abominable Pride and Vanity § 134. Pope Gregory added so much to the good works of his Predecessors by mending building adorning so many Temples Pillars and Posts with Stones Vestments Silver c. and removing the Bones of Saints if he mistook not that it is no wonder if Rome grew into greater pomp and splendor than ever before § 135. This godly Emperor having three Sons by his first Wife and marrying a second having two Sons by her the Sons of the first Wife hated the second Wife thinking her Son Charles had too much favor One Son Pepin apprehended his Father and the eldest Lotharius came in and approved it and the 3d joined with them and wickedly deposed him from his Kingdom of which anon § 136. Ludovicus called Councils at Paris Mentz Lyons and Tholouse for Reformation some say upon the warning of a Maid that being possessed of the Devil and speaking Latine said that this Devil executed Judgments on the Land for their Sins Injustice c. CCXLVII. The Council at Paris wrote a large Book for Reformation An. 829. with the rest of this Emperor's Constitutions worthy to be Translated for the common good that all ●ight see the difference between Reformers and turbulent Hereticks and Hereticators and proud aspiring Prelates The Book is a Treatise of pious Directions The 50th Chapter reproving the breach of the Lord's day saith that By sight and by certain relation they have notice that many working on that day have been killed with Thunde●bolts some punished by sudden Convulsions some by visible Fire their Flesh and Bones being in a moment consumed and turned into ashes and many other such terrible judgments Therefore they require that as the Iews keep their Sabbath all Men much more do spiritually observe this day of the Lord. The second Book doth notably shew the duty of Kings and Magistrates The last Chapter requireth those that are far from the Church to meet for Prayer in other places as being acceptable to God In the 8th Capitul Bin. p. 569. the Bishops say Beati Petri vicem indigni gerimus So that the Pope is not Peter's onely Successor others represent him if this Council did not mistake § 137. CCXLVIII We come now to a Council which sheweth you that the good Canons made by the Emperor for Church-Reformation were far from reforming the generality of the Bishops It is the Council at Compendium which too compendiously deposed the godly Emperor of whom the world was not worthy Calumniators pretended that one Bernhard a Courtier lay with Iudith the Emperor's second Wife The Sons of his first Wife hating her Pepin whom his Father had made King of Italy on this pretence Trayterously raiseth Arms against his Father Lotharius the eldest Son too much consenting persuaded his Father to let a meeting without Arms at Neomagus prevent a War At that meeting the Nobles Parentis Imperium legitimè prorogabant saith Binnius p. 575 and Pepin took up Arms again The Father conquereth his Son and taketh him Prisoner and might justly have taken away his life but he was stol'n out of Prison in the night Ludovicus depriveth him of his Kingdom of Italy and divideth it between his two Sons by the second Wife Charles and Rodolphus Hereupon Lotharius the eldest rebelling knew not how to conquer his godly and prosperous Father but by the Bishops Them he draweth into his Conspiracy that as Binnius himself saith Ut quem filii armis imperio deponere non possent horum saltem nundinariorum Antistitum suffragio judicio honore ac potestate imperiali privaretur successit impiis conatus impiissimus The last means of Treason was a Council of the base mercenary
Bishops a wicked Attempt that served these wicked Men and did the Feat Ebbo the Archbishop of Rhemes of a base original and enow more such Prelates were not wanting The Emperor had before voluntarily lamented his putting out the eyes of his Kinsman Bernard a Rebel of which he dyed as too cruel when now no Prince scrupleth Hanging or Beheading open Rebels The Church had satisfaction by his voluntary Penance for that which few Men will think a Fault And what do these Bishops now but become their Sovereign's Iudges yea and that when he was absent and condemn him unheard for this former Fault Note the Case 1. They condemn their King to be deposed who were Subjects 2. Yea Clergy-men that had least to do with State Affairs 3. Yea and that for a Fault which perhaps was but Justice and no Fault 4. Or if it were a Fault was before judged and remitted And did godly Lewis cherish Christian Bishops so zealously for this use so basely and trayterously to depose him 5. Yea and to join in the horrid Rebellion of unnatural Sons to accomplish their designs 6. And to tempt Princes to hate Religion when in Nomine Domini the pretence of Religion shall do greater wickedness by Prelates than the Rebels Arms was able to perform Saith the Author of the Life of Ludovicus Pius This judgment some few gain-sayed more consented to it the greatest part as it useth to be in such cases consented by word for fear of offending their Leaders They judged him absent and unheard neither confessing nor convict before the Bodies of St. Medard Confessor and St. Sebastian Martyr to lay down his Arms and forced him to lay them before the Altar and cloathing him in a black garment under a strict Guard they thrust him into Prison By this testimony saith Binnius it is certainly proved that the whole business was done by force and fear and coloured with the false pigment of Religion Thus was the best of Princes after all his services for the Prelates and kindness to his Sons deposed and basely used by both against Nature and Religion His first Restauration when he had been before deposed was by the Germans How he was restored the second time I find not certainly some would give Pope Gregory the honour of it It is likeliest that the interest which his goodness had got in the People with the odiousness of his Sons and Bishops Acts did it But fully restored after all this he was And being somewhat backward to forgive Lotharius he filled France with new Wars till the Emperor for Peace did pardon all But Ebbo Archbishop of Rhemes and Agobard Bishop of Lyons were deposed as Leaders of the Treason and Ebbo banished and restored by Lotharius when his Father dyed yea and sent as a fit Man to convert the Normans by Pope Paschal's mission being made Bishop of Hildesheim in Saxony by Ludovic King of Germany see Petavius Hist. l. 8. c. 8. Shortly after An. 840. the Emperor sollicited yet to more Wars by his own Sons about dividing the Kingdoms dyed a direful Eclipse of the Sun foregoing his death the day before Ascension-day § 138. That you may see the base Hypocrisie of these Trayterous Bishops I will recite their words in the Council that condemned the best of Emperors but his Imprisonment they leave out § 139. The Bishops condemnation of the Emperor Ludovicus Pius An. 833. after a Preface of the Duty of Bishops without Favor or Fear to judge Sinners and the need of putting their Sentence in writing to avoid the censure of bad Men they say We hold it necessary to notifie to all the Sons of the Church both present and future how we Bishops set over the Empire of our Lord and most glorious Emperor Lotharius An. 833. the first year of the said Prince in October did generally meet at the Palace at Compendium Compeigne and humbly heard the said Prince And we took care according to the Ministry enjoined us to manifest to him or his Nobles the generality of all the People what is the Vigor and Power or Priestly Ministry and with what Sentence of Damnation he deserveth to be damned who will not obey the warnings of the Priests And next both to the said Prince Lotharius and to all the People we studied to denounce that they should study most devoutly to please God and should not delay to appease him in whatever they had offended him For many things were examined which by negligence hapned in this Empire which manifestly tended to the scandal of the Church and the ruine of the People or the destruction of the Kingdom which must necessarily be quickly corrected and by all means for the future prevented Among other things we mentioned and remembred all Men how by God that Kingdom by the administration of the most excellent Emperor Charles of good memory and the Valor of his Predecessors was peaceable and united and nobly enlarged and committed to the Lord Emperor Lewis by God in great peace to be governed and by God's protection remain'd so preserved as long as that Prince studied God and used his Father's example and was careful to acquiesce in the counsels of good Men And how in progress of time as is manifest to all by his improvidence or negligence it fell into so great ignominy and baseness that it became not only the grief of Friends but the derision of Enemies But because the said Prince hath negligently managed the Ministry committed to him and did both do and compel others to do many things displeasing to God and Man or permitted others to do it and provoked God in many wicked counsels and scandalized the Church and that we may omit innumerable other things at last drew all his Subjects to a common destruction and by God't just judgment suddenly his Imperial Power was taken from him But we remembring the Commands of God and our Ministry and his Benefits thought him worthy that by the leave of the said Prince Lotharius we should send a Message to him by the Authority of this Sacred Assembly to admonish him of his Guilts that he might take sure advice for his safety or salvation That he might in his extremity study with all his might that being deprived of his earthly Power according to God's Council and the Churches Authority he might not also lose his Soul To the counsels of which Messengers and their most wholsom warnings he willingly consented he took time and set a day in which he would give an answer to their wholsom Admonitions And when the day was at hand the same Holy Assembly unanimously went to the venerable Man and took care to admonish him of all that he had offended God in and scandalized the Church and troubled the People committed to him and to bring all to his remembrance And he willingly embracing their wholsom Admonition and their worthy and congruous Aggravations promised
Marriage with Waldrada The two great Archbishops of Colen and Triers are the Leaders The Pope is against it and accuseth the Bishops of owning Adultery They appear at Rome and he condemneth them of Impudency while with some immodest words they undertake to justifie the thing of which more anon He chargeth the Bishops of heinous Villany and they despised him He condemneth the Concilium Metense in which the Adultery was allowed § 20. This Pope falls out with Hincmarus Bishop of Rhemes justifying against him the cause of Rothaldus whom he had deposed He sends Messengers to the King of Bulgaria converted in his days whom the Emperor's Officers stop and abuse The Adversaries of Images were still strong at Constantinople Anast. Bin. p. 670 c. Epist. 2. He useth a notable Argument for Images viz. God is known only in the Image of his Works Why then may we not make Images of the Saints But why must Men be compelled to do it or else be Hereticks and why must they be worshipped Epist. 5. He is pitifully put to it to justifie the Election of Nectarius and Ambrose and yet to condemn that of Photius for being a Lay-man And Ep. 6 the same again in the instance also of Tarasius § 21. The 8th Epistle of this Pope Nicolas to the Emperor Michael doth shew that he had now shaken off the Imperial Power and therefore chargeth his Letters as full of Blasphemy Injury Madness c. partly for being so sawcy as to bid the Pope Send some to him which he saith was far from the godly Emperors Partly for blaming the deeds of the Prelates when he saith Their words must be regarded and their authority and not their deeds Partly for calling the Latine Tongue barbarous and Scythian in comparison of the Greek which he saith is to reproach God that made it Partly for saying that the Council that deposed Ignatius and set up Photius was of the same number of Bishops as the first Council of Nice where this high Pope's answer is worth the notice of our Papists Bin. p. 689. The small number hurteth not where Piety aboundeth Nor doth multitude profit where Impiety reigneth Yea by how much the more numerous is the Congregation of the malignant by so much the stronger are they to do mischief Nor must men glory in numbers when they fight not against the Rulers of the darkness of this world and spiritual wickedness Glory not therefore in multitude because it is not the multitude but the cause that justifieth or damneth Fear not little Flocks c. This Doctrine was then fittest for the Pope in his Minority But the Letter is a Book pleading for the Roman Grandure and striving to bring the Emperor with others under his power § 22. In his Answer and Laws to the Bulgarians he difliketh their Severities against one that had pretended to be a Priest when he was not and had baptized many concluding that he had saved many and that they were not to be re-baptized Bin. p. 772. No not though he were no Christian that baptized them as after Consul Cap. 104. p. 782. To the Case Who are Patriarchs he saith properly they only that have succeeded Apostles which were only three Rome Alexandria and Antioch but improperly only Constantinople and Ierusalem But why then are not Ephesus Corinth Philippi c. Patriarchates And why had the rest of the Apostles no Successors Had they no Churches § 23. This Pope having Western security threatned Excommunication to the Emperor of the East unless he would depose Photius and restore Ignatius and threatned Lotharius for the cause of his rejected Wife and the Marriage of another as aforesaid and swaggered against Hincmarus Rhemensis for his deposing Rothaldus a Bishop and forced him to yield and condemned his Synod at Metz and would have proved that Pope Benedict had not confirmed it He and other Popes did make the Contentions of Bishops as well as of Princes a great means of their rising taking the part of him that appealed to Rome as injured and very oft of the truly injured By which means they had one Party still for them and all injured persons were ready to flie to them for help He Excommunicated the Bishops of Colen and Triers The poor Bishops that would fain be on the stronger side began now to be at a loss to know whether the Emperor or the Pope was the strongest They followed the Emperor and resisted the Pope a while The King and Hincmarus forbad Rothaldus going to Rome and imprisoned him But the Pope wearied them out by reason of the divisions of the Empire and Kingdom into so many hands of the French Line that being in continual suspicion of each other they needed the Pope's help Bin. p. 790. He ordereth Pennance instead of just death for one Cumarus that had murdered three of his own Sons viz. That for three years he pray at the Church-door and that for seven years he abstain from Wine three days in a week and for three years to go without shoes allowing him to eat Milk and Cheese but not Flesh and to enjoy his Possession but not have the Sacrament for seven years § 24. His Decretals begin That the Emperor's Iudgments and Laws are below the Canons and cannot dissolve them or prejudice them Tit. 4. 1. He saith All Patriarchal Dignity all Metropolitical Primacy all Bishops Chairs and the dignity of Churches of what Order soever were instituted by the Church of Rome But it 's he only did found it and erect it on the Rock of Faith now beginning who to St. Peter the Key-bearer of eternal life did commit the Rights both of the Terrene and the Celestial Empire Reader Had not the abuse of Humane Patriarchal Power and of Excommunications got up very high when this bold Pope made this Decree What! All Churches in the World made only by Rome Was not Ierusalem Antioch and many another made before it Did Christ say any thing of Rome Did not other Apostles build Churches by the same Apostolick Commission as Peter had Is not the Church built on the foundation of Prophets and Apostles Christ being the Head-corner Stone Did not others build the Church of Rome before Peter did it Did not Peter build other Churches before Rome Where and when did Christ give Peter the Imperial Power of Earth and Heaven did he not decide the Controversie who should be the chief or greatest with a prohibition of all Imperial Power With you it shall not be so § 25. But the next Dectee casteth Rome as low as this over-raised it If any one by Money or Humane-Favor or by Popular or Military Tumult be inthroned in the Apostolick Seats without the Concordant and Canonical Election of the Cardinals of that Church and then of the following Religious Clerks let him not be accounted a Pope or Apostolical but Apostatical By which Rome hath had so few Popes indeed and so many
other mens Preaching might not win Souls as well as his these Popes could not endure the crossing of their ambition when Kingdoms took not them for their Lords Epist. 188. Is to justifie a man that baptized his own Child in danger of death for which Anselm Bishop of Lemovic judged him to be separated from his Wife Were not these two Bishops judicious Casuists Was either of them in the right After many other Epistles striving with and for the Bulgarians as belonging to his Diocess he Epist. 195. chideth Methodius Archbishop of Pannonia for turning from his Laws and in special for celebrating Divine Service in the Sclavonian Tongue which is barbarous commanding him to do it only in Latine or Greek You see how the Pope would edifie the Barbarians if he be their pastor This is the first Papal decree that I remember against publick prayers in a known tongue But alas his neighbour Italian Bishops had not yet fully learnt the extent of his authority sending for many Bishops on pain of excommunication to wait on him and to obey him old Auspertus Archbishop of Milan was one that disobeyed him and being forbidden to officiate by him conformed not to his silencing and suspending decree but went on in his office as a Nonconformist The Pope sent two Bishops as Legates to admonish him He kept them at the dore and set light by their message for which the Pope chideth him Epist. 196. Epist. 197. He flattereth King Ludovicus to come to Rome and own him in hope that he may be Emperor and all Kingdoms subject to him Epist. 199 200 201 202 203. He consenteth to the restoring of Photius but chargeth him to give up the Bulgarians to his jurisdiction Many persons in many Epistles he exhorteth to break their Covenants with the Pagans and chideth and threatneth them that did it not Epist. 247. The inclination of Stentopulcher a Pannonian Lord to the Church of Rome brought down the Popes heart to dispense with Methodius and changed his judgment to give very fair reason why Mass and Gospel and all might be used in the Sclavonian and all tongues only to keep up the honour of the Latine tongue and his authority he commandeth that though the rest be done in the Sclavonian yet the Gospel be first read in Latine and then translated and read over again in the Sclavonian Epist. 250. 251. He approveth of Photius's restitution Epist. 256. He is fain to chide Auspert Bishop of Milan that Instead of fearing his sentence he laid in prison two Monks sent by the Pope and taken on the high way But his heart came down at last and he speaks Auspertus fair and alloweth of his ordination of Ioseph Episc. Astensis though irregular Epist. 260 and commandeth his Arch-Deacon to obey him Epist. 261. After this he excommunicateth the Archbishop of Ravenna and a great stir there was about that also Epist. 292. He had made one Optandus Bishop of Geneva But Opteramus Archbishop of Vienna took it to be an usurpation on his right and laid the Popes Bishop in a miserable prison so far was he yet from being where he would be Epist. 294. Having excommunicated Athanasius Bishop of Naples for not breaking his Covenant with the Saracens he absolveth him on condition that yet he will break it The matter was that the Italians not able to resist the Saracens those that lay next them under their power sought to save themselves by truce and tribute by which means the Saracens had leisure to come further near to Rome and so the Pope to keep them from himself compelled by excommunications the Lords and Bishops of other parts to break their league and stand up in arms to their own destruction That you may know what Bishops now ruled the Churches Epist. 295. The foresaid Bishop of Vienna giveth one reason why he rejected Optandus ordained Bishop of Geneva by the Pope viz. Because he never was either baptized made Clerk acclamed or learned To which saith the Pope This should be covered in silence because let us speak it with your charity your holiness having nothing of these was yet consecrated in the Church of Vienna was not here good succession and a holy Church Bishops unbaptized that were no Scholars and no Christians Epist. 296. One Bishop by an armed band of men carrieth away another out of the Church and the Pope interposeth Epist. 297. He again soliciteth Michael King of the Bulgarians to become his subject The poor men that had chosen Christ were so perplexed between the Priests that strove who should be their Vice-Christ and King of Kings that it seemed as hard to them to resolve the doubt as it before was to be Christians Yet Epist. 307. sheweth the Bishop of Ravenna being dead that yet the Roman usurpation was not grown so high as to take the choice of the Bishop out of the People and Presbyters hands except in long neglected vacancies as Geneva aforesaid Had not this Pope been kept under by Gods judgments suffering the Saracens so to ruine Italy as that he still needed the help of Princes he had been like to have overthrown Rome by his usurpations setting both Princes and Prelates against him But necessity made him a flatterer of the two Emperors of the West the Emperor of the East the King of France the King of Bulgaria the Princes of Pannonia and all that he needed as ambition made him still striving by Tibi dabo claves and Anathematizing to affright the world to his obedience I say not worse of him than Baronius Binnius c. who have no other way to deny the Histories of Pope Ioan than by saying that this mans baser compliance made him called Pope Joan. Baronius ad an 879 n. 55. reciteth an Epistle of this Popes so greatly complying with Photius even against the Filioquen that Binnius would haveus believe that Photius forged it And epistolam ipsam aeterna oblivione dignam nolui saith he hisce adjungi § 81. CCXC. An. 876. a Concilium Ticinense maketh Charles Emperor when the Pope that had crowned Ludovicus before calleth Charles praescitum praeelectum et praedestinatum hereto with all honourable Elogies And here cometh in a great controversie between the Papists and the Protestants viz. Whether Kings succeed by inheritance or by the election and making of the Pope The Pope thought the craft of putting in a big usurping word was as good as a Law to prove their own power to make Kings and unmake them Accordingly this Pope when he durst stay from Rome in France no longer lest he lost all being imprisoned for refusing the right Heir Charles returneth and speaketh some big words and turneth forced consent into super-Kingly commands and saith Bin. p. 1010 eligimus merito et approbavimus solemnitèr ad Romani Imperii sceptra proveximus et Augustali nomine decoravimus c. And to disable the Kingly claim of inheritance he saith Neque enim sibi honorem
he caused some Fellows so to cut and mangle the Face of the Pope that he would never after be seen abroad but kept close till he dyed which was after Three Years This Otho resolved to Revenge on Albericus And also the War between Hugo and Albericus broke out again Platina saith That Hugo was about to Revenge the Pope but then Dyed § 42. A Synod was at Narbon to end the Contention of two Bishops about the Extent of their Diocesses and Jurisdiction § 43. CCCXI. If yet you perceive not the sad State of the Church by Men's striving for Church-Dignities a Council at Soissons Anno 940. will tell you more You heard before how the Earl of Aquitane had got his Son to be made Arch-Bishop of Rhemes The Child in coats was but Five Years old It happened that he was put out again for his Infancy or Non-Age and Artaldus a Monk chosen in his stead This Council of Bishops was to decide the C●●e between the two Arch-Bishops The Objection against one was his Infancy and his Father 's ill means to bring him in The Objection against the other was Perjury He had sworn that he would never accept an Arch-Bishoprick Alas Must the Church of France be Headed by one of these an Infant or a Perjured Monk The Synod cast out the Perjured Monk and judged the Seat to the Infant as being lawfully Chosen Power made it a Lawful Call And the Bishops went to Rhemes and Consecrated him § 44. In the Year 920. the French Nobles by consent at Soissons had Revolted from King Charles because he took Haganon a Man of low of Quality into his Privy-Council and made him Great Herveus Bishop of Rhemes had partly healed this Breach But Anno 922. it broke out again and the Nobles chose Robert King and Herveus Consecrated him But this Rebellion was their Ruin Three Years after dyeth Herveus And the next Year Robert Fighting against Charles was slain at Soissons yet his Army conquered the King's Shortly after Rodolph Duke of Burgundy is called in by the Nobles and made King as if the Kingdom had been void Charles on pretence of a Treaty is led by Heribert to a Castle and thence carryed to Perone where he dyed Anno 929. leaving a Son Lewis to Fight for the Kingdom And when Charles was in Prison Hugo rejected Rodulph and called Lewis out of England to be King Anno 936. But Hugo and Heribert would be his Masters and gave him little Quiet Heribert dyeth miserably and Repenteth Hugo Domineering the King craveth Aid of Otho out of Germany against him But shortly dyeth himself by a Disease got by a Fall in Hunting a Wolf Lotharius his Son succeedeth him In his Third Year Hugo the Great Duke of Orleance dyeth and Lotharius the King Anno 986. His Son Ludovicus succeeded who dyed Childless Anno 987. And in him ended the Line of Charles the Great For Charles Duke of Loraine that was next was by the Treachery of a Bishop taken by Hugo Capet the Son of the fore-said Duke Hugo and imprisoned to Death And this Hugo got Possession of the Crown So much briefly on the By of these Matters that they after interrupt us not too much See Dion Petav. lib. 8. c. 16. § 45. Marinus 2. alias Martin 3. is made Pope Anno 943. and Reigned three Years and some Months the common Time of Popes in that Age. In his time Artaldus strove again for the Seat of Rhemes § 46. CCCXII When Bishops would needs be Princes they taught Princes to resolve to be Bishops And as Heribert did at Rhemes so did the Emperor at Constantinople put in a Patriark Trypho a Monk on condition that he should hold it but till his own Son Theophylact came to Age. When the time came Trypho would not Resigne A Council is called where Bin. ex Curopal tells you the State of that Church als● as too like the Western The Council being met Tryphon makes a Speech to them and saith That his Adversaries that had a mind to cast him out gave the reason that he knew not Letters But that they might all see that this was false and that he could Write and Read he call'd for Pen and Paper and having been taught thus much before wrote his Name thus Tryphon by the Mercy of God Arch-Bishop of Constantinople New Rome and Vniversal Patriark for that was then the Title The Emperor receiving the Paper it ●eems knowing that he could not Read writeth over head Knowing my self Vnworthy I Resigne the Throne to any that will And so sent the Paper to the Council and the Bishops wise and Good Men you must suppose Dethron'd Tryphon The Seat staid void five Months till Theophylact came to Age who then was chosen § 47. Anno 946. Agapetus the Second is made Pope in a time when Wars between the Hungarians and Henry Bavaria Berengarius and Otho c. made Miserable the Countries and Ignorance and Ambition the Churches § 48. CCCXIII. A Council at Virdun in France again tryed the Cause between the fore-said Infant and the Perjured Bishops Hugo and Artald and they undid what the last had done and Deposed Hugo and gave the Seat to Artald Yet we have not done with Doing and Vndoing For Pope Agapete now took Hugo's Part and wrote to the Bishops of France and Germany that Hugo that was in Possession was to be kept there But the Papists say he mistook by Hugo's Mis-information § 49. CCCXIV Anno 948. Another Council at Mosome was called for the same Business Hugo would not come in but sent the Pope's Letters which being not Canonical but his bare Command they rejected them cast out and Excommunicated Hugo till the next General-Council § 50. CCCXV. Anno 948. A General-Council of France and Germany is called at Engelenheim for the same Cause almost all France being disquieted about two Mens striving who should be the Great Arch-Bishop The Pope's Legate Marinus proved Hugo's Letters false and Hugo was Excommunicated and Artald setled But the Presence of two Kings Ludovicus and Otho did much there-to The Bishops thence removed to Triers called another Council where they judged for King Ludovicus against Duke Hugo and Excommunicated some Bishops Ordained by Bishop Hugo that was Ordained in his Child-hood And another Council at Rome confirmed these things § 51. Now cometh the Famous Pope Iohn the Twelfth the Son of Prince Albericus the Son of the Famous Whore A Child too Saith Baronius and Binius p. 1060. Quanquam hiuc Legitima aetas aliaque omnia deessent quae inlegitimo Pontifice requiruntur tamen accedente postea consensu totius Cleri visum est hunc potius esse Tolerandum quam Ecclesiam Schismate aliquo quod alioquin exortum fuisset dividendam He wanted Natural and Moral Endowments even All Things necessary to a Legitimate Pope say they And yet the After-Consent of the Clergy made him Tolerable c. Qu. 1.
Pagans Arch-Flamins were there were instituted Arch-Bishops to be over the Provinces where a Metropolis was Metropolitans or Arch-Bishops were placed and Bishops in lesser Cities where had been Flamins and Counts But in Africa they were diver●●fyed only by the times of their ordination the Bishop of Carthage being the chief In his Epistle 5. he hath a good confession of faith where among other things he well saith That God predestinated only things good but soreknew both good and evil and that Grace so preventeth and followeth man that yet mans free will is not to be denied that the Soul is not part of God but created of nothing He anathematizeth every Heresie and every one that receiveth or venerateth any Scriptures but what are received by the Catholick Church c. In the 6th again he chides the Patriarchs of Constantinople for the title Vniversal saying that Peter himself was never called the Vniversal Apostle nor did any of his Successors take so prodigious a title For he is no friend to the bridegroom that would be loved in his stead but a Bawd of Antichrist c. His 8th Epistle is to the Greek Emperor to flatter him to help him with Henry against the Normans In which to prove the Romans succession he saith The holy Church and Apostolick Seat hath been too long usurped by Mercenaries that were no Pastors that sought their own and not the things of Christ. This Pope and Michael Patriarch of Constantinople were so unreconcilable that they continued mutual condemnations Michael is condemned with his Greeks 1. For rebaptizing the Papists 2. For saying that they had no true Sacrifice or Baptism 3. For holding Priests marriage for rejecting the Filioque c. Bin. p. 1116. § 114. CCCXXIX An. 1049. A Roman Council was fain upon pennance to pardon Simoniacal Bishops and Priests because the Cry was that else almost all the Churches would be destitute and the Church service omitted to the subversion of the Christian Religion and the desperation of all the faithful Where was the holy Church of Rome now and its Succession if the Canons for nullifying Simoniacal ordinations hold good § 115. CCCXXX The Pope resolved to go to France and Preside in a Council which he did at Rhemes But many Nobles and Bishops told the King that it was an usurpation and a Novelty and would enslave his Kingdom The King forbad him yet the Pope came whether the King would or not And the King went away about his military affairs and some Bishops with him and others stayed The Arch-Bishop of Rhemes and others were accused of heinous Crimes The Bishop of Laugres was charged with entring by Simoniacal heresies selling orders bearing Armes Murder Adultery Tyranny to his Clergy and Sodomy Many witnesses testified all this One Clergy-man witnessed that while he was yet a Lay-man this Bishop violently took his Wife from him and when he had committed adultery with her he made her a Nun. A Presbyter witnessed that this Bishop took him and delivered him to his followers who tormenting him by many torments which is more wicked did with sharp nails pierce his generals and by such violence forced him to give them ten pounds of denaries The Bishop hearing these accusations desired time and Council and going to the Arch-Bishops of Besanzon and Lyons openeth his secrets to them and desireth them to plead his cause But the man involved in the guilt of such villanies who but the day before had been the accuser of a faulty Brother and seeing the mote in anothers eye had not seen the beam in his own but moved for the other mans damnation being himself deservedly to be condemned was not only unable to excuse himself from the objected crimes but also the tongue of his advocate the Arch-Bishop was by God so silenced that he was not able to speak a word for his defence For the Arch-Bishop of Besanzon where he prepared himself to plead for him and excuse his crimes suddenly found himself disabled in his voice by God And when the Arch-Bishop of Besanzon found himself so disabled by miracles he gave sings to the Arch-Bishop of Lyons to speak for this his Brother in his stead who rising up said that the accused Bishop doth confess that he sold Orders and that he extorted the money from the said Priest but that he did not do the tormenting actions mentioned by him other things he denyed but before the next day he fled from the Council And another Bishop of Nevers confessed that his Parents bought his Place and deposed himself and some other Bishops confessed Simoniacal entrance The Pope excommunicated many that fled from the Council He renewed some old neglected Canons as 1. That no man be promoted to Church-Government without the ELECTION of the CLERKS and the PEOPLE c. CHAP. 12. The continuation of the history of Councils and their Bishops till the Conucil at Constantinople § 1. CCCXXXI Under Leo 9. an 1049 a Synod at Mentz some accused Bishops were questioned and other little matters done § 2. CCCXXXII In a Council at 1050. Berengarius his Letters to Lanfrancus were read and he condemned in a blind age § 3. CCCXXXIII An. 1050. A Synod at Vercelli condemned Iohannes Scotus and Berengarius and some that defended them § 4. CCCXXXIV An. 1050. A Council at Coyaca contained the King Ferdinandus of Castile and his Queen Bishops and Nobles like our Parliaments and so were many Councils then It is said to be for restoring Christianity so low was it grown in the height of Popery and ignorance having several orders for reformation The 3d Title saith that wine water and the host in the eucharist signifie the Trinity The 5th saith that Priests must so eat at the feasts of the dead as to do some good for their souls c. § 5. CCCXXXV An. 1051. A Roman Council excommunicated Gregory Bishop of Vercelli for Adultery with a widow espowsed to his Uncle and for perjuries But he was after restored to his office on promise of satisfaction Also all the whores of Priests were decreed to be made servants at Laterane Pet. Damian et Bin. p. 1124. § 6. CCCXXXVI In another Roman Synod the Pope Canonized a Bishop Gerhard and decided a quarrel between two Bishops for extent of their Diocesses § 7. Vict●r the 2d is next Pope an 1055. Leo Hostiensis saith that no man at Rome was found worthy Plat. saith that they feared offending the Emperor However the Romans sent to the Emperor to choose one for them and some say desired this might be the man § 8. CCCXXXVII Platina saith that in a Council at Florence he deposed many Bishops for Simony and Fornication § 9. CCCXXXVIII In a Council at Lyons Baronius after others saith a miracle was done viz. saith he The heresie of Simonie having seized on all Italy and Burgundie the Pope sent Hildebrand a sub-Deacon to call a Council where an Arch-Bishop accused of Simony bribed all
his accusers the next day into silence Hildebrand bid him say Glory be to the Father Son and Holy Ghost● He said the rest but was not able to name the Holy Ghost Whereupon he confest his crimes and besides seven and twenty other Prelates of the Churches forty five Bishops consest themselves Simoniacks and renounced their places What a case was the Church in when Popery grew ripe Pet. Damian mentioneth six Bishops deposed by Hildebrand for divers crimes § 10. By the way it is worthy enquiry whether Hildebrand being neither Bishop Priest nor Deacon but a sub-Deacon only was any of the Clergy or Church-Pastors to whom Christ gave the power of the Keys Yea if he had been a Deacon And therefore whether he had any power from Christ to preside before Arch-Bishops and Bishops in in Councils and to depose and excommunicate Bishops If it be said that he did it by the Pope's commission the question recurreth whether God ever gave Pope or Prelate power to make new Church-officers whom he never instituted de specie that should have the power of the Keys yea and be above the Bishops of the Church And whether Popes or Prelates may commit preaching or Sacraments to Lay-men if not how can they commit the Keys of Church-Government to them or to any as little authorized by Christ Indeed baptizing is but using the Key of Church-entrance And therefore he that may so let men into the Church may baptize them which Papists unhappily allow the Laity And if per se or per alium will salve all whether Priests may not preach pray and give Sacraments by Lay-men And so Lay-men at last put down both Prelates and Priests as needless § 11. CCCXXXIX An. 1055. They say that this great Subdeacon Hildebrand the grand advancer of the Roman Kingdom did call a Council at Tours which cited poor Berengarius and forced him to recant whether it be true I know not § 12. To this Council the Emperor Henry sent his Agents to complain that Ferdinand the great King of Castile refused subjection to the Emperor and claimed some such title to himself and now ignorance superstition and interest having made the Clergy the Rulers of Kings and Kingdoms the Emperor desireth that King Ferdinand may be excommunicate unless he will submit and surcease and all the Kingdom of Spain be interdicted or forbidden Gods worship The Prelates perceived how they were set up by this motion and made Kings of Kings and they thought the Emperor's motion reasonable and without hearing King Ferdinand made themselves judges and sent him word that he must submit and obey or be excommunicated and bear the interdict The King took time to answer and calling his own Bishops together found them of the same mind and spirit and so was forced to promise submission This Baronius an 1055. writes ex Io. Mariano and Binnius p. 1126. § 13. CCCXL They say that the Emperor dying left his Son Henry but five years old and knew no better way to secure his succession than to desire Pope Victor to take the care of it who therefore called a Council at Colen to quiet Baldwin and Godfrey Earls of Flanders that else would have resisted him Thus Bishops in Councils now were as Parliaments to the Kingdoms of deluded men § 14. CCCXLI At Tholouse an 1056. A Council of 18 Bishops attempted reformation forbidding alas how oft Bishops to sell orders and other acts of Simony and Priests using their wives and the Adultery Incest and perjury of Bishops and Priests bidding them that are such repent and forbidding communion with men called hereticks § 15. CCCXLII Though Adultery Incest Perjury and Simony of Bishops was so hardly restrained it seems they would pay for it by superstition for a Council at Compostella decreed saith Baron ad an 1056. that 1. All Bishops and Priests should say Mass every day 2. That at fasts and Litanies which were perambulations in penitence they should be cloathed in sackcloth § 16. Stephen the 9th alias 10th is next made Pope In his time saith Platina the Church of Milan was reconciled to Rome that had withdrawn itself from it two hundred years Was all the world then subject to the Pope when his Italian neighbours were not § 17. This Pope lived after his entrance but 6 or 7 months and they say made them promise him to choose none in his place till Hildebrand came home to counsel them A great Subdeacon that Rome must be ruled by But in the mean time the new Emperor being but five or six years old the great men of Italy turned to the old game and brought in one by strength Mincius whom they called Benedict the 10th alias 9th a Bishop he reigned 9 months 20 dayes But when Hildebrand came home he got him cast out This was the twenty first schism in the Papacie § 18. Hildebrand's crafty counsel was to send to the Emperor to consent to Gerard Bishop of Florence whom they chose in Italy and called Nicholas the 2d Lest Benedict should get the Emperor on his side and so Nicholas made Benedict renounce and banished him But how shall we be sure which was the true Pope § 19. This Pope's first epistle is to the Arch-Bishop of Rhemes to advise him to admonish the King of France for resisting the Pope § 20. CCCXLIII The Pope's Council at Sutrium deposed Benedict § 21. CCCXLIV An. 1059. A Council of 113 Bishops at Rome they say made Berengarius recant but not repent but as soon as he came home he wrote against them and their Doctrine § 22. In this Council saith Platina the Pope made a decree very profitable to the Church of Rome Bin. saith these were the words translated p. 1666. First God being the Inspector it is decreed that the election of the Roman Bishop be in the power of the Cardinal Bishops so that if any one be inthroned in the Apostolick seat without the foregoing concordant and Canonical election of them and after the consent of the following religious Orders Clerks and Laity he be not accounted Apostolical but Apostatical Here it is much to be noted 1. That this is a new foundation of the Papacy by Hildebrand's Council without which it was falling to utter confusion How then doth the Roman sect cry down Innovation and boast of Antiquity 2. Either the Bishop of Rome is to be chosen as the Bishop of that particular Church and then the members of that particular Church should choose him or else as the Bishop of the universal Church pretendedly and then the universal Church should choose him But the Cardinal Bishops of other particular Churches are neither the particular Roman Church nor the universal nor their delegates and so have no just pretence of power 3. Either this decree was new or old and in force before If new their Church foundation is new and mutable as is said If old all the Popes that were otherwise chosen
out as is aforesaid by an Army § 34. CCCXLIX In a Council at Barcelon the Spaniards abrogated their old Gothish Laws and made new ones but would not change the Gothish Church rites Here also Alexander was owned § 35. An. 1065. A Council was at Rome against incest § 36. Another for the same the former not prevailing § 37. In a Synod at Winchester William the Conqueror puts down and imprisons Bishops and sets up others for his own interest § 38. CCCL A Council at Mentz was to have separated the young Emperor and his Queen but the Popes Legate hindred it § 39. CCCLI In a Council at Mentz the Bishop of Constance is cast out for Simony and many crimes the Emperor being for him § 40. An. 1072. They say an English Council subjected York to Canterbury and owned Wolstan Bishop of Worcester accused for being unlearned as he was § 41. CCCLII. An. 1073. In a Council at Ersord the Emperor got the Bishops to fulfil his will about some Tythes threatening them that appealed to Rome § 42. Now cometh in the Foundation of the new Church of Rome Hildebrand called Gregory 7th An. 1073. a man of Great wit and for ought I find in the most probable History not guilty of the gross immoralities or sensuality of many of his predecessors but it 's like blinded with the opinion which the Papists Fifth-monarchy men have received and Camp●nelia de regno Dei opened and pleaded for viz. that Christs Kingdom on earth consisteth in the Saints judging the world that is the Pope and Prelates ruling the Kings and Kingdoms of the earth he did with greatest animosity set himself to execute his opinions And withal the factions of Rome and tyranny of their petty Princes and Whores and debauched Citizens having long made the Papacy the scorn of the world and the lamentation of all sober Christians constrained the better part to beg help from the Emperors against debauched monstrous Popes and their upholders And by this means sometimes the choice fell into the Emperors hands and sometimes when they were far off the City-prevailing-part rebelled and chose without them or pulled down them that the Emperors set up And then the Emperors came and pulled down the Anti-Popes and chastised the City faction and thus between the Italian and the German powers the City was a field of war and the richer by bribes and the stronger by the sword how monstrous villanies soever were set up It was no wonder then if Hildebrand first by Pope Nicholas 2. and Alexander and then by himself did resolve to run a desperate hazard when he had two such great works at once to do as first to recover the debauched and shattered shamed Papacy from this confusion and then to subdue all Kings and Kingdoms within their reach to such a Priest-King as was then under so great disgrace And tibi dabo claves must do all this § 43. Hildebrand however had the wit to settle himself at first by seeking the Emperor's consent And being settled he got Agnes the Emperor's mother and Guardian mostly on his side He then began to claim presentations and investitures and to take the power over the Bishops out of the Emperor's hands and to threaten him as Simoniacal and for communicating with the excommunicate The Emperor after some treaty submitted and was reconciled to the Pope but the Pope said he did not amend The Pope calls a Council at Rome where he excommunicated Simoniacks openly saying that he would excommunicate the Emperor unless he amended Guibert Arch-Bishop of Ravenna being there accuseth the Pope for such threats against the Emperor and got Cincius the Prefect's Son to apprehend him and imprison him The People rise up in arms and deliver the Pope and pull down Cincius's house to the ground and cutting off their noses banish his family out of the City Cincius got to the Emperor Guibert Arch-Bishop of Ravenna Theobald Arch-Bishop of Milan and most of all the other Bishops on that side the Alpes conspire against the Pope And yet they say that all the world were his subjects He calls another Synod of his own Bishops for Synods were still the great executioners where Gibert and Hugo one of his Cardinals that was against him are deposed and curst from Christ. This Emperor also calls a Council at Wormes where by the means of Sigifred Arch-Bishop of Mentz it is decreed that no man in any thing obey the Pope of Rome Roland a Clerk is sent to Rome to command the Pope to meddle with the government no more and the Cardinals are commanded to forsake Gregory and seek for another Pope Now the War began between the Sword and the Keys Gregory by sentence deposed the Arch-Bishop of Mentz and the other Clergy that were for the Emperor and he Anathematized the Emperor himself having first deprived him of all Regal Power and administration as far as his decree would do it The form of his curse and deposition Platina reciteth where are these words I cast him down from his Imperial and Regal Administration And I absolve all Christians Subject to the Empire from that Oath by which they have used to swear Fidelity to true Kings For it is meet that he be deprived of dignity who endeavoureth to diminish the Majesty of the Church Mark O ye Kings and be wise Some told the Pope that the Emperor should not be so hastily Anathematized To whom he answered Did Christ except Kings when he said to Peter Feed my Sheep when he gave him the Power of binding and looseing he excepted none from his power The Emperor wrote Letters to many Christian Princes and States to acquaint them with the Papal Injuries and the Pope wrote his accusations of the Emperor and his own Justification The Empire was presently all in Division One part was for the Emperor and another for the Pope Most of the Bishops of Germany obeyed the Emperor and some were against him as excommunicate Some Councils were for him and some against him And as Abbas Vrspurgensis said they did so often swear and forswear according as Power and Interest moved one time for the Emperor and another against him that Perjury was become a common thing both with the Bishops and the Laity He that will see the many treatises that Learned men then wrote for the power of Princes against the Papal tyranny and rebellion may find them in the Voluminous Collections of Michael Goldastus de Monarchia The party that obeyed the Pope chose another to be Emperor Rodulph Duke of Suevia The Emperor requireth the Pope to Excommunicate Rodulph He refuseth The Emperor calleth a Council of Bishops at Brixia They depose the Pope and make Gibert of Ravenna Pope called Clement the 3d. who saith Onuphrius sate 21 years so long had they two Popes at this 23d Schism or doubling But did the Emperor nothing to prevent all this Yes at the motion of the German Princes to avoid
Germans French c You see here that it was far from all the world that was subject to the Pope and took his part in his usurpations Epist. 4. He commandeth a General no more to fight against the King of Dalmatia as belonging to St. Peter § 50. Yet this Pope doth teach them the truth against deceitful pennance or repentance Lib. 7. Epist. 10. viz. We say that it is a fruitless pennance when men remain in the same fault or in the like or in a worse or in one little less He therefore that will worthily repent must have recourse to the Original of his Faith and be solicitous watchfully to keep that which in his Baptism he promised viz. to renounce the Devil and his pomps and to believe in God that is thinking rightly of him to obey his Commands § 51. Epist. 11. He tells the Duke of Bohemia that it is customarily and doubtfully that he saluteth him with Apostolical Benediction Because he communicated with the excommunicate And he denieth his request of using or translating the Divine Service or Offices into the Sclavonian tongue because there were many mysteries in it Thus come up the Prohibition to the peoplee to pray understandingly Epist. 14. He absolveth the Bishop of Liege from an Oath because he took it by force And commandeth him to rise up against the imposer with all his power he being St. Peter's enemy Epist. 21. He tells the King of Denmark of an ill custom among them that whatever ill weather or calamity befell them they imputed all to the ill lives of Priests Epist. 23. He tells our King William the Conqueror that seeing he was on his side and is charged by some with all his bloodshed that now he must be very obedient to him as his Pastor and Peter's Successor And Epist. 25. He tells them that the Papal or Apostolick power is greater than the Kingly and must rule it as the Sun is greater than the Moon Lib. 8. Epist. 1. He laments the Corruption of the Church in Armenia 1. Because they mixed not Water with Wine in the Sacrament when all men know that Blood and Water came from the side of Christ. 2. Because they made not their Chrysm of Balsom but of Butter 3. Because they honoured the memory of Dioscorus O what Heresies Pag. 1254. in Bin. There is an Oath that Robert Duke of Apulia Calabria and Sicily to be true to the Pope and defend him as holding all these from him and there is the Popes grant of them to him laying claim also to his other dominions the denyal of which he patiently beareth at the present § 52. But lest you think that at least the Kingdom of Spain was fast all this while to the Church of Rome Lib. 8. Epist. 2. He writeth thus himself By the Letters of my Legate Richard Abbot of Marseilles you may know how great impiety is gone out of your Monastery of Cluny by the presumption of Robert a Monk who imitating Simon Magus feareth not to rise up against the Authority of St. Peter with all the craft of his malignity and to reduce by his suggestion into their old error an hundred thousand men who by our diligence began to return to the right way But he hopes that the Abbot thinks as he for the honour of the Roman Church He chargeth the Abbot to cast out this man that had so endangred Spain adding And by your Letters diligently acquaint the King who is deceived by his fraud that he hath greatly provoked St. Peter's wrath and indignation against him and his grievous Revenge against him and his Kingdom unless he repent because he undecently handled a Legate of the Roman Church and believed falshood rather than truth Of which that he may worthily make satisfaction to God and St. Peter as he hath disgraced our Legate so let him by due humility and condign Reverence make himself commendable and devout For we think meet to signifie to him by you that we will excommunicate him if he correct not his fault and will solicite all the faithful in the parts of Spain to his confusion And if they be not obedient to my command I will not think much to travel into Spain my self and there to endeavour dura et aspera Things hard and sharp against him as an enemy of the Christian Religion O brave Pope had not these men a notable Knack or hap that could sit and talk down Emperors and Kings and subdue and dispose of Kingdoms by sitting at home and talking big and telling them that St. Peter was angry with them And who was this King but the great Al●onsus to whom he writeth himself Epist. 3. to put away his evil counsellors and hearken in all things to the Popes Legate Richard § 53. Epist. 6. l. 8. He commandeth Souldiers to help Michael the Emperor of Constant against the Usurper to make himself judge and get an interest again in the Empire But in vain § 54. Epist. 7. He declareth that divers Princes having sworn and promised him help he resolved to come with an Army to recover Ravenna to the Church Epist. 8. He rejoyceth that they had newly found St. Matthew's body and bids them now take him joyfully for their patron These are the grounds of Popish superstition The body of St. Matthew that preached to the Abassines in another part of the world is found at Salerno in Italy a thousand years after he is dead O that one knew how to be sure that it was his body and how it came thither Divers such findings they glory in § 55. Epist. 10. He writeth to Orzoceus Prince of Calaris or Sardinia to require him as a note of his obedience to St. Peter and concord with the Church of Rome whose use it is to let his Arch-Bishop shave his Beard and to command all the Clergy of his dominion to shave their Beards and if they obey not to force them to it or exclude them And to be sure of success he lets him know how truly I know not that many Princes importuned him to give them leave to invade his Countrey but this righteous ruling Pope denied leave to them all till he had tryed whether he would obey him which if he would do he would not only deny them leave to invade him but also protect him Reader think here 1. Whether Princes held not their kingdoms loosely when they where to lose them if they obeyed not the Pope in so small a thing as the shaving of a Priests Beard 2. Whether it were not a hard thing for the Catholick Church then to have concord when so small a difference as the shaving or not shaving of Beards were put into their terms of Union and Peace Who were the Schismaticks then was it not the makers and imposers of such laws and terms 3. Is it not a high power that is claimmed by Popes when no Priest in all the Christian world may have
reign eternally with the highest Emperor But the power of the other brings them eternally to perish by eternal damnation with the Prince of darkness who is King over all the Sons of Pride And it is not to be wondered at that bad Prelates consent to an unrighteous King whom for their ill got preferments by him they love and fear who Simoniacally ordaining any do for a base price sell even God himself For as the elect are inseperably united to their head so the reprobate are pertinaciously confederate against the good with him that is head of their militia Let Emperors and Kings see then how much the Imperial and Kingly dignity is to be feared in which very few are saved and those that by Gods mercy come to salvation are not made so good or eminent as many of the poor the Spirit of God being judge For from the beginning of the world to these times of ours we find not in all the authentick Scripture any Emperors or Kings whose lives were so adorned with great virtue and miracles as were an innumerable multitude of the contemners of the World though I believe that by Gods mercy many of them have been saved For to say nothing of the Apostles and Martyrs what Emperor or King was ever famous for miracles like Martin Anthony or Benedict what Emperor or King did raise the dead cleanse the Lepers illuminate the Blind Constantine of pious memory Theodosius Honorius Charles Lewis propagators of Christian Religion defenders of the Church are praised and honoured by the Church but not noted to have shined with such glory of miracles Moreover to what Kings or Emperors names are Churches or Altars dedicated or hath the Holy Church appointed Masses to be celebrated Let Kings and other Princes fear lest by how much in this life they would be preferred before other men by so much the more liable they be to eternal burnings As it is written Wisd. c. 6. Great men shall be greatly tormented For they have as many men to be accountable for as were Subject to them And if one religious man find it so great a work to keep his own soul how great a labour belongeth to Princes for so many thousand souls * And if the judgment of holy Church so bind a man for killing one what will become of them that for this worlds honour murder many thousands Who though they sometime cry Meâ Culpâ for killing many yet are glad at the heart for the extension of their honour and are not sorry that they did what is done nor that they have driven their Brethren into Hell The rest of the Epistle exhorteth Kings to avoid Pride and Tyranny As I cite it historically to shew you the Spirit of Papacy so fas est et ab hoste doceri There is somewhat in it worthy the remembering that greatness prove not pernicious to themselves and others for want of goodness § 58. But sure these Papal arguments savour not of infallibility May not a mean wit discern 1. That goodness giveth not right to places of Government without a call else the best man must be always King And then what Pope had Title to his Seat Right to Heaven will not prove a right to Kingdoms Nor è contra Power to cast out Devils will not prove that the exorcist may cast out the King nor give him Laws 2. What though the King be a Scholar to a Grammarian a Musician a Physician Is it therefore absurd that he be King over these Masters What though he must obey his Physician for his life May he not command that Physician for the common peace What though he cannot do that which a Physician a Musician c. can do May he not rule them for all that 3. What a discontented mind have such holy Prelates that cannot be satisfied with their Title to Heaven their Miracles Sanctity Church-Keys c. unless they may also be above Kings and have the secular power also 4. And what cause have Kings and States to look to themselves that are under such Priests where every Clergy man is their Master And how many superiors then hath every Popish King Even as many as he hath Prelates Priests or exorcists Yet I will confess that if Princes had been as bad still as some of them have been and as such Popes pretended and Popes and Prelates and Priests had been as Infallible Holy Wise and Peaceable as they have pretended and had not proved the shame of Religion and Incendiaries of the Christian World in so many generations it would have tempted men strongly for the interest of Religion and mankind to wish that all power had been committed to the Clergy and that Campanella's Regnum Dei or Fift-Monarchy by Priestly Government of the World had taken place But when their own historians make fourty Popes together Monsters of wickedness and piety at the same time to be translated to the Princes this turneth our thoughts another way Especially when we find still that a proud worldly wicked Clergy are the great confounders of the World § 59. Epist. 23. He sends to his Legates to demand of the King of France that every house do give a penny to St. Peter if they take him for their Father and Pastor It seemeth the Roman Peter must have money Rule and Honour of all the world though he cry it down in others § 60. Lib. 9. Ep. 1. He suspendeth the Arch-Bishop of Rouen in Normandy from consecrating any Bishop or Priest or Church because he had not visited the Pope at Rome when as men and women came to him from the remoter parts of the Earth The Pope loved much company and loved not privacy so well as I do and because he had not sought his pallium though he wrote submissively to him § 61. Even this Pope Ep. 2. l. 9. Professeth to the King of Spain that a Lye is a sin though it come from a pious intention for peace but in Priests it is a kind of Sacriledg And if so Priests had need to take heed that they Lye not by swearing subscribing declaring or professing any falshood though à Pope should command them § 62. In the same Ep. he congratulates that Spain received his Order of service or Liturgie because that which they used hitherto had some things contrary to the Christian Faith What Was the old Spanish Liturgy heresie § 63. Ep. 3. l. 9. The Pope upon the death of Rodulph fearing the Emperors coming into Italy pretendeth that now all men advised him to receive the Emperor for peace into his favour and mercy saying that almost all the Italians were for him and that his Patroness Mathildis was counted mad by her own Subjects who would not fight for her and him and therefore sends to try whether he could get any help from others charging them to see that the next chosen King be one true to St. Peter and to that end sends them an
Oath of obedience to Saint Peter and his Vicar which the King must take § 64. Ep. 4. He employeth his agents to engage the Norman Duke Robert to help him with an Army And Ep. 5. His Legate having deposed all the Bishops of Normandy that refused to come to his Synod he tells him that William King of England and Duke of Normandy though he was not so good as he should be was more useful and better to the Church than other Kings and therefore must not be offended and therefore bids him restore the Bishops and also to pardon some Soldiers excommunicated for not paying tythes because they must not lose the Soldiers Ep. 8. He writeth to the Duke of Venice by all means to avoid all excommunicate persons and their friendship and favour lest they came into the snares of the same damnation For Ana●hema's were the arms by which he subdued Emperors and was to do his work The like to others in other Epistles And Ep. 12. He brought one Count Bertran to swear him fidelity and to give him all his Countrey and honour as Earl of Provence and this for the pardon of his own and his Fathers sins § 65. Ep. 14. He congratulates to the Kings of the Visigoths their conversion to Christianity but tells them they must oft send to Rome for further instruction How frequently he made Arch-Bishops and Bishops travel to him out of other Kingdoms when his Legates wronged them many other Epistles shew Ep. 17. The Norman Duke Robert acquainteth the Pope with a Victory which he had got He returneth him this answer that he had but done his duty and now as it was Saint Peter that had given him this victory if he would not make him angry he must now be thankful to Saint Peter and remember what he owed him to help him against the Emperor Henry and all his other enemies § 66. Ep. 20. He writes to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury that he had shewed himself guilty of disobedience which is as Idolatry in that he had not travelled to Rome to visit the Pope when he commanded him and tells him that if he come not by All-Saints day next he shall be deposed for many weak men that could scarce rise out of their beds came from other much farther Countreys and he should lose Saint Peter ' s grace if he failed must they do so also from the Antipodes Ep. 22. He tells the Count of Angiers or Anjou that he should have obeyed the sentence of his Bishop though it was unjust And so every wicked Prelates power over Princes and all others shall be absolute He flattered our King William the Conqueror more than other Kings but ep 2. l. 11. He complaineth of his punishing a Bishop telling him that God taketh them as the apple of his eye and saith Touch not mine anointed and though they are naught and very unworthy they must be honoured and being called Gods men must not meddle with them Ep. 1. Append. Bin. p. 1278 he tells Lanfrank Arch-Bishop of Canterbury how far the Church was from purity in his days viz. that The Bishops and such as should be Pastors of Souls do with insatiable desire hunt after the Glory of the World and the pleasures of the flesh And do not only themselves confound all things that are holy and religious but by their example draw their Subjects to all wickedness And that to let them alone is unlawful and to resist them how difficult So much of the Epistles of Greg. 7th who seemeth to be much more against vice than his predecessors for many ages but more for tyrannical usurpation and rebellion than ever any that was before him And if the better sort of them be such what may be expected from them § 67. CCCLIII An. 1074. In a Council at Rome Priests were forbid marrying and all that were married commanded to put away their Wives The Arch-Bishop of Mentz trying to do the same in Germany the whole party of the Clergy saith Lambert an 1074 raged against it and called the Pope a downright Heretick that opposed Christs Law who forbad putting away Wives except for fornication saying all men cannot receive this saying and as driving men to fornication They went from the Synod and some were for casting cut the Archbishop of Mentz and putting him to death But he spake them fair But the Pope went on § 68. CCCLIV. In a Synod at Genesius the Popes Legate and Anselm Lucens excommunicated many that had been against Anselm whereupon the whole City was enraged and forsook Mathildis and joyned with the Emperor and expelled the Bishop one Peter a Canon leading them § 69. CCCLV. an 1075. a Council at Rome excommunicated five of the Emperors Family unless they travelled to Rome and made satisfaction It excommunicated Philip King of France unless he satisfied the Nuntii of the Pope It suspended the Arch-bishop of Breme the Bishop of Strasburg the Bishop of Spire the Bishop of Bamberge and in Lombardie the Bishop of Papia the Bishop of Turine the Bishop of Placentine and also Robert Duke of Apulia and Robert de Roritello c. § 70. an 1075. Was the foresaid Synod at Mentz where the Arch-Bishop seeking to bring the Clergy to obey the Pope in putting away their Wives was fain to put it off to save his life from the Clergies rage The English Councils I omit referring you to Spelman of which one deposed Wulstan they say injuriously c. § 71. CCCLVI. an 1076. A Council at Worms sentenced the Pope deposed Two Bishops awhile refused consent but at last yielded And they sent to the Pope that thenceforth all that he did as Pope was void § 72. CCCLVII Hereupon the Pope calls a Council at Rome which excommunicated all the German Bishops that deposed him and the Bishops of Lombardy as conspiring against St. Peter and many French Bishops And with them the Emperor Henry and deposed him quantum inse from all his dominions and absolved his Subjects from their oaths as aforesaid § 73. CCCLVIII The excommunicate Bishops had a Council at Papia where they retorted the Popes Anathema on himself and excommunicate him § 74 CCCLIX The Pope calls another Council at Rome where the Arch-Bishops of Millan and Ravenna the Antipope are excommunicate and the Emperor's cause and party again condemned § 75. CCCLX Another Synod at Rome an 1078. decreed divers things for defence of the Clergies priviledges And it is observable that to that day the old Canons were in force for nulling all ordinations not made by the Common Consent of the Clerks and People Ordinationes quae interveniente pretio vel precibus vel obsequio alicujus personae ea intentione impenso vel quae non Communi consensu Cleri populi secundum Canonicas sanctiones fiunt ab his ad quos consecratio pertinet non comprobantur infirmas irritas esse dijudicamus quoniam qui taliter ordinantur non per ostium id est
Emperor and the new Pope Clement Guibert Raven § 87. CCCLXX An. 1085. A Council at Quintilineburg condemned two Heresies The first was the Royalist Heresie of Loyalty called the Henricians from Henry the Emperor who thought that the Pope and Prelates had not authority to depose Kings and Emperors but were to be Subjects to them An Heresie if such that most Kings are very much inclined to as taught them by St. Paul Rom. 13. and by St. Peter himself You see O Princes if you will be the Popes and Prelates Executioners that you must come at last to the Stake your selves and fall under the Law de Hereticis comburendis unless you will be Servants your selves or trust to some peculiar chalibeate remedies The great argument of the Pope was The Disciple is not above his Master One Gunibert undertook to prove That the Pope had no such power but what he had usurped and taken to himself but might be judged But the foresaid Argument struck all dead But might not these Prelates have understood 1. That the Pope himself may have a Master in Philosophy Physick c. And is he not for all that Above his Master 2. Is the King above no Master that teacheth him in any Art or Science 3. Are not Christ's words plainly to be understood of Superiority and Inferiority in eodem genere The Disciple as such is not above his Master but as a King he may or else Princes give up their Kingdoms to every Schoolmaster that they choose 4. This Doctrine sets not only Popes and Prelates but every teaching Priest or Preacher above the King for to such the King may be a Disciple 5. This tendeth therefore to tempt Princes to be utterly ignorant and brutish for fear lest by learning any thing of any Master they should give away their Kingdoms And if Children be Kings by inheritance what a snare is here laid to undo them 6. Doth not the Holy Ghost say Let every Soul be subject and were not Peter and the Apostles some of these Souls Did not Christ himself and Peter pay Tribute But remember again you that are Subjects to such Councils and Prelates that it is by them judged Heresie to be Loyal and to plead for the Clergies subjection to Kings § 88. The Heresie of Wecilo was here also condemned that said as they report him That when the secular Men were spoiled of their Estates and Goods it 's like by the Ecclesiasticks they were not bound to obey the Ecclesiasticks and might be received by others when they were Excommunicate It was therefore decreed That whoever was Excommunicate by his Bishop that Bishop not being himself Excommunicate or deprived of his Office though it were unjustly done should by no means be received to Communion by any other unless absolved in the Ecclesiastical manner And so God must be disobeyed that commandeth the Faithful to worship him in Sacramental Communion whenever any proud malicious or drunken Prelate will forbid him And must so live and die unless his Masters will repent of their injuries When as it is usual for one injury to engage a Man to more or to continue it for the justification of the first § 89. Another Decree of this Hereticating Council was What days to keep the Spring and Summer Fasts on and that none eat Cheese or Eggs in Lent This is the Roman holiness and way to Heaven Many Archbishops and several Cardinals were here Excommunicate also for being for the Emperor against the Pope § 90. CCCLXXI But the Wars of Councils continuing a Council was called by the Emperor at Mentz where the deposition of Gregory and the substitution of Clement whose Legates were present was confirmed and the Condemners again condemned And so we have done with the Life Letters and Councils of Hildebrand § 91. Pope Gregory dying Clement alone was Pope one year and then the Italians chose Desiderius an Abbot called Victor the 3d. This was the 23d Schism or two Popes at once Victor lived but a year and three months and 24 days Historians tell us of Famines and dreadful Prodigies in those days In that little time he raised an Army which beat the Saracens in Africk § 92. CCCLXXII A Council at Capua chose this Victor An. 1087. and when he was brought to Rome they found Pope Clement in possession and keeping it by Arms but when they had fought Victor's Soldiers proved Victors and his Title to be best § 93. CCCLXXIII Victor had a Council at Benevent where he damned Pope Clement and his Bishops An. 1087. The grand Controversie of those times of the Pope against the Emperor and other Princes was about Presentations to Bishopricks or Investitures which the Pope said belonged to no Lay-man Victor ' s Council again judged such Presentations or Collation of Bishopricks to be Sacriledge and such Simoniacs that used them And here it 's worth the noting that they decree Bin. p. 1293. That Penance and Communion may be received from none but a Catholick And if no Catholick Priest be there it is righter to persist without visible Communion and to communicate invisibly with the Lord than by taking it from a Heretick to be separated from God For there is no Communion of Christ and Belial nor of a Believer with an Infidel But every Heretick is an Infidel And a Simoniac because an Heretick is an Infidel For though Catholicks because of the Hereticks being over them cannot have visible and corporal Communion yet while in mind they are joined to Christ they invisibly receive his Communion Let it be here noted 1. That this Council confesseth that the Sacrament and visible Communion is not of necessity to salvation And why not the same of visible Baptism when it cannot be had on lawful terms 2. That therefore it is no sinful Separation to refuse such Church-Communion as cannot be had on lawful terms or but from Hereticks Simoniacs or Sacrilegious 3. That this sheweth that the Church of Rome hath their Succession oft interrupted For by the testimony of their most flattering Historians and of General Councils many Popes have been Simoniacs Ergo saith this Council Hereticks and Infidels Ergo no Popes Ergo their Faith failed 4. That this maketh their Bishops Priests and Churches in all their own Kingdoms where Princes have the presenting and investing of Bishops to be all void and null as being Infidels And that not only among Protestants none should communicate with any Bishops that have their Presentation and Investiture from Kings but must separate from them as Infidels but even in Papists Kingdoms they must do the same § 94. Victor commended Odo or Otho Ostiensis for his Successor who is chosen in his stead against Clement and called Urban the 2d He made their old Patroness Mathildis in her age to marry with an Italian Duke Welpho on condition that they should never have Carnal Copulation The Emperor came to Rome and set up Clement Urban or Otho being one
that before had published the Excommunication of the Emperor Excommunicateth him again and goeth from Rome into Italy and France and sets the Princes upon the recovering of Ierusalem Listing 300000 Men and so reconciled most of their Strifes at home The History of this Expedition Platina briefly and many Authors largely give us to whom I refer you Conrade the Emperor's Son rebelleth against his Father encouraged by the Pope The Papal Historians pretend that his Father would have forced him to Incest but others think otherwise It was this Pope saith Bin. p. 1293. that appointed the horary Prayers called the Office of the Blessed Virgin to be used by Clergy and Laity for success against the Saracens Having Reigned eleven years and four months he died § 95. CCCLXXIV An. 1089. Urban in a Council at Rome repeateth against the Emperor and Pope Clement what was done before by Greg. the 7th Clement is expelled Rome and driven to renounce The Holy Wars breed reconciling thoughts The Papal Party offer the Emperor his Crown if he will depose Clement His Bishops dissuade him and he refuseth being otherwise for Peace inclined to it § 96. CCCLXXV A Council at Troy in Apulia about marriage of Kinsfolk § 97. An. 1090. A Council at Tolouse deposed the Bishop as criminal c. § 98. An. 1090. A Council of Urban's at Melfia decreed again that no Bishop receive Investiture from any Lay-man and that no Lay-man have right or authority over any Clerk Also against false Penance Hildebrand before had decreed that Penance and Baptism and so Absolution profit not impenitent undisposed Receivers § 99. CCCLXXVI A Council at Benevent condemned Pope Clement again § 100. CCCLXXVII Another at Troy did consult for Urban's interest § 101. CCCLXXVIII Another at Constance An. 1094. against married Priests and Simoniacs and about the number of Easter and Whitsun Holy-days And the Empress Praxes departed from the Emperor accusing the Court of most filthy Fornication perhaps the cause of their Calamities § 102. CCCLXXIX An. 1094. A Council at Ostio in France Excommunicated their own King Philip for putting away his Wife and marrying another and again Excommunicateth the Emperor and Pope Clement § 103. CCCLXXX An. 1095. A Council at Placentia heard the Cause of the Emperor of Const. begging help against the Infidels and of the King of France and the Empress complained how filthily she had been forced by her Husband's command It repeated damnations and decreed that no money be taken for Baptizings Chrysms or Burials § 104. CCCLXXXI A Council at Clermont for the same Causes It decreeth That if one injure another on Monday Wednesday or Thursday it shall not be reputed a breach of Peace but if it be done on any of the other four days it shall be judged a breach of holy Peace and be punished as shall be judged C. 1. And that no Clergyman shall receive any Honour or Preferment from the hand of Lay-men C. 15. And C. 16. That no Kings or Princes make investiture of any Ecclesiastick Honour And C. 17. That no Bishop or Priest make any promise of Allegiance to a King or to any Lay-man Ne Regi vel alicui Laico in manibus Ligium fidelitatem faciat Ligius is Liege or Ligatus a Vassal or full Subject And C. 19. That no Lay-labourer keep the tenth of his labour from the Clergy or receive from the Clergy the tenth of his wages § 105. It sheweth you that ever the Sacrament in one kind was not introduced in that the 28th Canon of this Council decreeth that None communicate at the Altar unless he receive the Body by it self and the Blood by it self unless through necessity or with cautelousness Can. 29. Any one that fled from his Enemies to any Cross was to be there protected as in a Church But the Ierusalem War was the main business of this Council by which the Pope cunningly turned away Animosities and Jealousies from himself and got the repute of a Holy Defender of the Church § 106. But in an English Council all the Bishops in the Kingdom save one Rochester would force Archbishop Anselme to renounce the Pope which Anselme refusing and reasoning against they said that he blasphemed the King setting up any in his Kingdom without his consent and so they jointly renounce their subjection and obedience to the Archbishop and abjure the unity of brotherly society with him Bin. p. 1302. You see Luther was not the first that renounced the Pope § 107. CCCLXXXII A Council at Tours for the Holy War where the King of France Philip was reconciled promising service to the Pope § 108. CCCLXXXIII An. 1097. A Concilium Barense was held for winning the Greek Church in their necessity where Anselme of Canterbury got the honour in disputing of the Procession of the Holy Ghost The sum of which Disputation is in his Works § 109. CCCLXXXIV An. 1098. A Council at Rome gave the King of England time to repent till Michaelmas the former Council had Excommunicated him if Anselme had not desired delay § 110. An. 1099. Another Roman Council for the Holy War and Reexcommunicating Pope Clement but what Clement did all this while is past over here § 111. An. 1099. Some little Council at Ierusalem put out Arnulph the Archbishop of Ierusalem as a wicked Man and Usurper and gave it to the Pope's Legat. § 112. An. 1099. Paschal the 2d is made Pope a little after Pope Clement dieth who had Reigned with his Competitors 21 years Being buried at Ravenna after five years a Council caused his Carkass to be dig'd up and burnt Decreeing That all the Bishops of the Henrician Heresie that is who were for Emperors being above the Pope or not deposable by him and for his power of Presentations or Investitures if they were alive should be deposed if dead should be dig'd up and burnt which were most of the Bishops of the West if Hildebrand himself mistook not O Military Bishops that can overcome the dead No wonder if the Church and Nations be confounded by you that cannot let each others Carkasses rest in their Graves but will dig up the bones of the Prelates of many Kingdoms even the greatest part How many Princes and Prelates now Papists are guilty of the Henrician Heresie Should not their bones also be burnt if you durst § 113. But the Schism continued three persons successively being made Anti-Popes by the Emperor's party but all of them one after another overcome by Paschal who being a Military Pope did most of his work by his Army which he frequently had on foot In his time Ierusalem and the Cities about were won by Godfrey of Bullen his Brother Baldwin Boemund Tancred and the rest of the Christians and Godfrey made first King and Baldwin next Boemund and Tancred having Antioch and after suffering great losses c. as you may read in the Histories § 114. Never did the Papal Rebellion work more unnaturally than in
a Council where he would meet him with Victor Divo is the appointed place between France and Germany The Emperor with Victor and some Kings cometh to the Council Alexander refuseth because he call'd it not and calls another at Tours in France The Emperor angry returneth to Germany and sendeth Victor into Italy where he dyeth and Guido called Paschal the 3d is chosen after him The Romans chose Consuls that were Alexander's Friends and send for him to Rome and receive him The Italians then arm against the Emperor who cometh with an Army into Italy and taketh Ancona The Greek Emperor is drawn to promise the Pope a great Army against Frederick so he would unite the Empire and Churches again This afrighteth the Emperor The Tusculanes and the Abanes had a War with the Romans that oppressed them with Tribute and gave the Romans a grievous overthrow The Emperor besiegeth Rome William of Sicily sends help to the Pope The People of Rome intreat the Emperor for Peace which he promiseth on condition the worthier Pope may be chosen and the Schism ended The Pope Alexander hearing of this flieth secretly by Ship The Plague driveth the Emperor from Rome he goeth into Germany The Pope's Friends in Italy get strength The Greek Emperor Emanuel sendeth yet larger offers to the Pope if he would restore him the Western Empire by Re-union Pope Paschal dyeth The Tusculane Cardinal called Calistus the 3d is chosen in his stead and reigned seven years saith Onuphr But the Tusculanes refusing him he goeth to Alexander and resigneth to him all his right in Tusculum Whereupon the Tusculanes receive Alexander who there heard the Ambassador of Henry King of England purging him of the guilt of the death of Tho. Becket and sent into England two Cardinals with power to examine all the matter who imposed on the King though swearing he was innocent that for Penance he should maintain Soldiers for Ierusalem and for three years should have an Army against the Barbarians and defend the Church-liberties in his Land and not hinder Appeals to Rome All which he sware By which saith Platina he merited that the Title of the Kingdom of England should be transferred on him and his Heirs by the Pope's consent whence it is observed that all the Kings of England do recognize or acknowledge the Rights of the Kingdom from the Pope of Rome A just Reward for their serving the Titular Servant of Servants in his pestilent Ambition That he should thence take them for his Vassals and take himself for the disposer of their Crowns stooping to such Priests doth make them Kings of Kings Yet Alexander hath not got possession of Rome it self so far was he from being received by all the world and so low did he condescend as to offer the Citizens That if they would receive him he would come in peace and meddle with nothing but Divine matters leaving to them the care of secular things And when they would not grant him this much he went to Signia Was this man truly the Bishop of Rome that had no more of the Citizens consent so much as to dwell among them There he Canonizeth the Archbishop of Canterbury Tho. Becket for a Saint The Emperor entereth Italy and taketh many Cities but the Venetians owning the Pope and he being wearied with Wars at Papia treateth of a Peace But this not taking the Emperor shortly returned with another Army into Italy but was so hard put to it by the Millanois and others in one fight that he narrowly escaped death himself This one loss made the Nobles that followed him say That they suffered this because they fought unlawfully against the Church and if he made not his peace presently with the Pope they would go home So that the Emperor was forced to submit to the Pope for fear of being forsaken by his Subjects and Soldiers At Venice they met and the Emperor kissing the Pope's feet credible Historians say That the Pope trod on his Neck scornfully and profanely repeating the words of the Psalm Thou shalt tread on the Lion and Adder c. Ps. 91. 13. But Baronius and Binnius will not believe this though as Fowlis noteth p. 261. it is recorded by Ciaconius Masson and abundance more of their own Historians and preserved in the Archives of the Library at Venice and the Picture of the Story hang'd publickly in the Senate House The Emperor's severity against them of Milan was not for nothing They not only brake their Oath by Rebellion but when his wife Beatrix came to see the City set her on a Mule backward with the tail in her hand and so led her in scorn from one Gate out at the other What may not such provocation do to an Emperor The stir that there was about the Emperor's holding the Stirrup to Pope Urban is recorded by divers Historians And how the Kings of France and England did the like by Alexander And how this on debate was said to be their due The truth is the Papists Princes of Europe themselves are beholden to the Protestants for redeeming them from Servitude and their Kingdoms from the meer will and mercy of the Pope § 176. The Pope having conquered the Emperor by Cursing is past doubt now of Conquering Rome for such Men were Bishops by Conquest and not by Consent To Tusculum he goeth and now demandeth of the Romans that they abrogate the Office of the Consuls But finding this too hard a task to be done at once he maketh a bargain with them that none should by the People be chosen Consuls till they had taken an Oath of Fidelity to the Pope in his own proposed words and that they would never do any thing against his dignity And so Alexander goeth the third time to Rome and calls a Council but quickly dyeth when after twenty years contention he thought he was new setled in peace An. 1185. § 177. Onuphrius after Radavicus Frising Ioan. Cremon Abb. Ursperg c. saith that it was this Pope Alexander that first ordained that the Clergy and People being excluded from the Election of the Pope and so he was no true Bishop the choice should be in the Cardinals shut up in Conclave and go by two third parts of their Votes to avoid Schisms for the time to come Onuphrius saith that he had the writing of Pope Lucius the 3d that saith he was the first that was chosen by the Cardinals scrutiny though the Cardinals in a looser way were lately made Electors before He that is no Bishop is no Universal Bishop or Pope But he that is not chosen by the Clergy or People of that Church is no Bishop The Minor is proved by the Canons of many Councils § 178. The Epistles of Alexander are so full of Usurpation and Treason against Princes that Binnius thought it best to omit them and give you but the Titles But those that concern England are in Mat. Paris whom Binnius referreth you to
though he oft reproach him for speaking truth Many are about Tho. Becket Archbishop of Canterbury and against the Emperor and the King of England forbidding the Coronation of Henry the 3d and suspending Roger Archbishop of York for Crowning him and such like to shew how he was King of Kings § 179. CCCCXXI Of the Councils in Alexander's time recorded by Binnius the first is An. 1160. at Papia called by the Emperor which voted Victor Pope and condemned Roland called Alexander The Letters of the Emperor and the Bishops tell us that this Council consisted of immunerable Bishops and Abbots and that the Emperor after a good Speech departed and left all to their judgments And that it was there proved by the Oaths of many Witnesses that Victor was chosen by the full consent of the People and Clergy and some Cardinals and that twelve days before Roland was chosen and that Roland was present and contradicted not but bid them obey him that was chosen And that after being Chancellor he stole out of the City and the major part of the Cardinals having before the death of the last Pope entered a Confederacy to choose none but one of themselves that confederated against the Emperor they secretly chose Roland the People and Clergy a multitude subscribing all desiring Victor There or four Kings also consenting to accept him when the Council declared him the onely true Pope and Roland a perfidious Usurper Here is all the Romans Clergy and People the Emperor and many Princes and a Council of innumerable Prelates of Germany Italy c. against the major Vote of an upstart sort of Men called Cardinals that had confederated treacherously before And yet the Roman Papacy is by Succession from this Man that was no true Bishop himself CCCCXXII CCCCXXIII CCCCXXIV CCCCXXV An. 1161. Alexander got a Council at Clermont and another at Newmarket and another at Belvacum and An. 1164. another at Tours to curse the Emperour and Pope Victor The French taking his part and the English at last kept up the Schism and Contention The Reader must take this notice by the way that such Meetings as we call Parliaments the Popish Historians often call Councils that they may draw Men to think that what Parliaments did was done by Clergy Power And when Lords Commons and Bishops met in the same Assembly some called them Parliaments and some Councils And as Spelman saith pag. 529. The same Assemblies were indeed mixt and partly Civil or Royal as he calleth them because called by the King and partly Ecclesiastical But among the Romanists Councils are greatly advanced by this ascribing to them the Acts and Power of Parliaments Accordingly the Parliament at Clarendon is called a Council by Binnius CCCCXXVI by the reproachful name of Conciliabulum because they setled the Rights of the King as Ruler of the Clergy and would not let the Pope be King of England which is the Henrician or Royal Heresie to be punished by Fire or other death on Kings themselves when the Pope is big enough to do it In this Council or Parliament Thomas of Canterbury and the rest of the Bishops concurred with the rest for fear But Thomas when he came home repented and imposed so strict Penance on himself that the Pope hearing of it was sain in absolve him § 180. CCCCXXVII An. 1171. Binnius saith that Ireland being given to the Pope as soon as they became Christians the Pope gave it to King Henry the 2d as soon as he had conquered it and a Council at Cassel was called for Reformation Note here 1. That the Pope hath great reason to seek the Conversion of the Kingdoms of the world if they are his when they are converted 2. That it is no wonder if five parts of six of the world be still Infidels or at least that they are unwilling to yield to Popish Christianity when Heathen and Infidel Kings must lose their Kingdoms and become Subjects to the Pope if they turn to Popish Christianity 3. That it hath long been a cunning way of Bounty with Popes to give Princes their own Kingdoms and Conquests when they cannot take them from them CCCCXXVIII An. 1179. was the Synod at Venice for reconciliation § 181. CCCCXXIX An. 1180. Alexander being at peace called a Council at Rome which they call General or the 11th General Council approved at Lateran In which are many reforming Canons and many for the Papal power The first is as aforesaid to confine the power of Pope-making to two third parts of the Cardinals only Another to degrade those ordained by the three Anti-Popes Another that no one have many Churches c. And the last against some called Cathari Patrini or Publicani as Hereticks giving those Indulgences that will fight against them and absolving all Inferiors from all Fidelity and Duty to them c. Some think that these were the Waldenses some the Albigenses But I have elsewhere shewed against Mr. Danvers that there were several sorts then in those Countries some Manichee Hereticks and some good Christians called Waldense and Albigenses but against the Pope and his Superstitions whom the Papists would jumble together to disgrace the best who were as some of their own Writers e.g. Sanders lib. 7. de vis Monar say A portion of the Henricians that is of the Emperor Henry's Heresie that held the Pope's false usurping Excommunications were to be contemned not as from Henry their Teacher that is they were Royalists and against the Pope's ruling the abused world by the Cursing way § 182. To this Council Crab and Binnius have annexed a voluminous Appendix of Decrees of which many are notable As that no Bishop may suspend a Presbyter without the judgment of his Chapter That a Perjured Clergy-man is to be perpetually deprived and may not govern a Church That in case of ambiguity of words we must have recourse to the common understanding of them with divers others § 183. Alexander dying Lucius the 3d is the first chosen by the Cardinals according to Alexander's Lateran Council as is aforesaid And to perfect the Papacy having got the choice of the Bishop out of the hands of the Clergy and People of Rome his Flatterers next persuade him to put down the Order and Name of Senators which attempting his Party by the Cities insurrection had their eyes put out and the Pope forced to leave the City and at Luca while he provoked Princes to send Soldiers to Ierusalem and Asia he dyed § 184. CCCCXXX One Council this Pope had at Verona as they say where the Emperor Frederick met him and sollicited him to restore all the Bishops and Clergy deposed that had adhered to him and the Anti-Popes The Pope consented but said he could not do it without another Council By which it appeareth that this at Verona was no true Council § 185. Urbanus the 3d is next Pope called Turbanus as an Incendiary by Ab. Ursspergens but better
spoken of by Platina he sate above one year It 's said that he dyed of grief for the loss of Ierusalem in his time CCCCXXXI A Council he had at Paris they say for Ierusalem too late § 186. Gregory the 8th succeedeth him two months and dyeth § 187. An. 1187. Clement the 3d succeeded him who importuneth the Christian Kings to recover Ierusalem The Emperor Frederick the King of France and Richard King of England go in person The Emperor was drowned in Asia as he was wa●●ing himself in a River The rest do much but all to little purpose but to the great destruction of many Christians The Pope sendeth an Army into Sicily to claim it for the Church because the King dyed childless There also bloody havock is made An. 1188. An Assembly at Paris furthered the Holy War Binnius will call it a Council § 188. Though this Clemens sate but three years and five months he ended the long War between the Romans and the Pope granting them their Senators but deposing their Patricius or Head that Union might not strengthen them § 189. Caelestine the 3d cometh next who to get Sicily from Tancred gets out of a Nunnery a devoted Virgin that was the Heiress and marrieth her to the young Emperor Henry the 6th and giveth him with her the Kingdoms of Sicily and Naples when he can get them and so wholly obligeth him to the Church and to surrender Tusculum which the Romans utterly demolish Sicily the Emperor gets and puts out Tancred's eyes but Naples was too hard for him his Soldiers dying of the Plague How the King of France and the King of England disagreed in Palestine and how the King of France returned home and treacherously joined with Iohn the King's Brother to invade the King of England's Dominions and so called him from attempting the Siege of Ierusalem and how he was taken Prisoner by the way home many Histories acquaint you § 190. Binnius out of Urspergens tells us how this Pope that had sent the King of France into Palestine for his repudiating his Wife after interdicted the whole Kingdom of France the use of holy thing O horrid Villany worse than Heathenish For one Man's Family-sin to forbid so great a Kingdom to worship their God and Saviour Saladine when he had taken Ierusalem dealt better with the Christians O bewitched Princes and People that by their degenerate Prelates would be brought to suffer or submit to such a wickedness contrary to the nature of all Religion O wicked Prelates and Clergy that would obey an Usurper in suc● a wicked Interdict But the King of France grievously punished his Clergy for the Fact For it was done by the Pope's Legat and the Bishops at a Council at Divion the CCCCXXXII here § 191. Next cometh the great Pope Innocent the 3d a young man of 30 years old called Lotharius An. 1198. § 192. The Duke of Saxony Otho the 4th succeedeth the Emperor Henry the 6th But Philip of Suevia is his Competitor and the King of France was for Henry's Brother and the Pope for Otho hating Frederick's Line Some say Philip conquered and deposed Otho but Petavius after divers others saith that they agreed that Philip should Reign quietly during his life and Otho afterward succeed him After ten years Otho a Palatine of the Rhine killeth Philip and Otho again Reigneth quietly marrying Philip's daughter But seeking to possess Apulia and Calabria by Arms and not obeying the Pope's Prohibition the Pope Excommunicateth him first and after sentenceth him deprived or deposed which at his command the Archbishop of Mentz publisheth which Otho despising the Pope to shew that he can make and unmake Emperors and Kings sets up Frederick King of Sicily Henry the 6ths Son by C●nstantia the Nun formerly saith Binnius which Petavius denieth and commandeth all to take him for Emperor The King of France stands for Frederick and the King of England for Otho Otho is overcome being forsaken and dyeth for grief and Friderick a young man twenty years old prevaileth § 193. Passing by the English and Scottish Councils for the Sabbath or Lords day CCCCXXXIII The Roman Council that deposed the Emperor Otto for rebellion against the Pope was An. 1210. § 194. This Pope excommunicated our King Iohn for rejecting Stephen Laughton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Yea he deposed him quantum inse and interdicted Gods worship to the whole Kingdom for six years three months and fourteen dayes O wicked Bishops and Priests that would give over the worship of God because an Usurper forbad it The Pope gave the King of France commission to seize on England King Iohn is constrained to please the Pope What wars were hereupon in England and how he gave up his Kingdom at last to the Pope and to hold it as of him our own Historians certifie us yea and how he offered the King of Morocco to turn Mahometan for his help § 195. CCCCXXXIX Next cometh the famous 4th Laterane Council called by the Papists the 12th General approved of 400 Bishops and 800 other Fathers for others they have an 1215. Regn. Frider. 2. In the first Cap. is the Creed and their Transubstantiation asserted as the way of Union between Christ and us we taking his flesh as he took ours and that no one can make this Sacrament but a Priest ritely ordained according to the Keyes of the Church which Christ gave to the Apostles and their successours But the Sacrament of Baptism saveth by whom soever it is ritely done The 2d Cap. condemneth Abbot Ioachim's doctrine who opposed Lombard as making a quaternity for saying that Quaedam summa res est Pater Filius et Spiritus Sanctus et illa res non est generans nec genita nec procedens which the Council owneth The 3d. Cap. is this We excommunicate and anathematize every Heresie extolling itself against this holy Orthodox Catholick faith which we before expounded condemning all Hereticks by what names soever called having indeed divers faces but tails tyed together because they agree in vanity in the same thing And being damned let them be left to the present secular power or their Bailiffs to be punished by due animadversion the Clerks being first degraded from their orders so that the goods of such damned ones if they be Lay-men be confiscated but if Clerks let them be applied to the Churches from which they had their stipends But for those that are found notable only by suspicion unless they shew their innocency by a congruous purgation according to the considerations of the suspicion and the quality of the person let them be smitten with the sword of anathema cursed from Christ and avoided by all till they have given condign satisfaction so that if they remain a year excommunicate they be then condemned as Hereticks And let the secular powers be warned and induced and if need be compelled by ecclesiastical censure what offices soever they are in that as they desire to be
the pretended KEYES § 202. Honorius 3d. succeedeth Innocent He confirmeth the Dominican and Franciscan Religions and Sainteth Francis He procureth a new expedition towards Ierusalem and the destruction of many The Emperor Friderick followeth his predecessors and invadeth Italy conquereth Sicily and Apulia being his own by his Mothers title But the Pope excommunicateth him and by the mediation of Iohn King of Ierusalem in title he is absolved § 203. CCCCXL. Stephen Laughton being restored a Synod at Oxford passed many general excommunications and there numbered all the Holy-dayes to be kept and made several Canons One good one was that every great Parish have two or three Presbyters because of the greatness of the work and if one should be sick c. Another repeated many old Canons that no fees be taken for Sacraments or Burials c. Another that no Clergy-m●n should keep their Concubines PVBLICKLY in their lodgings nor else where go to them with scandal A good caution for their credit § 204. CCCCXLI A German Council lamenting that Clergy-men kept their Concubines publickly and would not dismiss them forbids this publick keeping of them C. 1 2 3 5. But dealeth gently with them But C. 6. those that preach when the Bishop silenceth them it maketh infamous and intestable casting them out without hope of mercy or restitution ab officio et beneficio and rendering them uncapable for the time to come Here the Popes Legate demanded out of every Cathedral two Prebends to be given to Rome And great reason that he that giveth all even Bishopricks and Kingdoms should have some again even what he will But it was denied § 205. CCCCXLII Also in a Synod at Westminster An. 1226. the Pope demanding two Prebends out of every Cathedral the King answered that the matter belonged to all Christendom and when he saw what other Kingdoms did herein he would give his answer § 206. Gregory 9th is next Pope He commandeth the Emperor Friderick 2d to go recover Ierusalem and excommunicateth him a● a dissembler for his delaies He re-Sainteth St. Francis and St. Dominick He absolveth the Emperor upon his payment of an hundred and twenty thousand ounces of Gold for damage The greatest sedition and heresie saith Platina rose at Rom● that ever was there so that the Pope was banished But a plague ended it that left scarce the tenth man alive Again the Senators and the Pope agree not about Legislation and the Pope is fain to be gone again and gets the Emperor to promise him that their conjunct forces should assault the Romans The Emperor faileth and bids his Souldiers help the Romans himself departing the Pope by mony bireth them to help him and recovereth Rome He sendeth preachers abroad to call men to the holy War He Sainteth Elizabeth daughter to the King of Hungary An Army goeth into Asia with Theobald King of Navarre and others and is overthrown He would go to Rome but is kept out The Emperor taketh many Cities in Gregory's party get him into the City He again curseth the Emperor and deposeth him from his Empire by his presumptuous sentence The Venetians help the Pope The Emperor afflicteth them The Italians are divided In Pistoria two brothers one called Guelph was for the Pope and the other called Gibel was for the Emperor the City was 〈◊〉 and the name of Guelphs and Gibellines filled Italy with confusion The Romans were again falling off from the Pope but he went among them Carrying the heads of the Apostles you must believe it and by supplication and speeches moved the People to pity him and got them to fight against the Emperor which cost them and others of the Church party in Italy dear The Pope calleth a Council to depose the Emperor again to kill one man twice But the Emperor way-layeth them and taketh many Cardinals and Bishops and Imprisons them by the Pisanes help Gregory dyed for grief in his 14th year or 15th This is that Pope that by the help of Raymund made the Books of Decretals So much out of Platina Binnius addeth that the Emperor went with an Army into Asia in performance of his vow and received Ierusalem yielded to him And made ten years truce with Saladine and therefore was again excommunicated by the Pope § 207. In this Popes time saith Bin. the Divines of Paris after long disputation defined that it is a mortal sin for any man to have two benefices when one of them sufficeth to sustain him 208. Multitudes of the Albigenses were burnt and killed as Hereticks § 209. CCCCXLIII A Council at London under Otto the Popes Legate was held An. 1237. the King sending first to charge them to do nothing against his rights and leaving one to see to it The Legate was in danger for opposing Pluralities the Bishop of Worcester and multitudes theatning resistance and it was suspended § 210. Coelestine the 4th is next Pope but not by the Laterane Canon by two third parts of the Cardinals some say he lived 18 daies some 17 some 14 some say two Schismaticks were between § 211. The seat was void a year and eight months and more the Emperor keeping many Cardinals in prison but at the request of Baldwin of Constantinaple he released them § 212. Innocent 4th is next chosen who of a Cardinal-friend became by interest a Pope-enemy to the Emperor and daring not to stay in Italy fled into France and there calleth a Council of Bishops with these he hunted Princes and excommunicateth or curseth the Emperor where saith Matth. Paris An. 1245 one Priest being commanded to publish the curse he doth it thus Good People I am commanded to pronounce excommunication against the Emperor Frederick the Candles put out and Bells ringing But not knowing the reason though I know the hatred between them that one doth the wrong but which I know not as far as my power reacheth I excommunicate anathematize him that doth wrong absolve him that suffers the wrong which is so hurtful to all Christendome And at Lyons the Pope curseth him again The Emperor despised the Popes deposition and would not give up his Crown for fear of his curse The Popes party choose Henry Laudgrave of Thuringe Emperor who is quickly killed besieging Vlm as some say that party chose William Earl of Nassau after him Henry the Son of Friderick was drawn to rebel and being overcome by his Father soon after died And the Emperor not long after him by what death it is not agreed some say poysoned others say stifled by Mansfred his base Son some say he continued impenitent others that he repented of his opposing the Pope not probable some speak ill of him others extol him for Learning and worthiness § 193. Frederick being dead the Pope travels France and Matth. Paris saith that at his leaving Lyons a Cryer called the Citizens who had long entertained him to his farewel and that Cardinal Hugo made his farewel Speech telling
bonds of Anathema Rustandus cometh with the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of Hereford is empowred by the Pope to gather moneys for the Pope or King A Parliament is called at Westminster They refuse and go home The Popes Letters press the Collection A Council of Bishops is called at London so much money is demanded saith M. Paris as would have enslaved or undone all the Kingdome The Bishop of London protested he would lose his head rather than consent The Bishop of Worcester said he would be hang'd first The rest follow them The King is angry and threatneth The Earl Marshal in anger when the King called him Traytor answered thou liest I never was a Traytor nor will be The King threatned to send men to thresh out his corn and fell it to humble him The Earl told him if he did so he would cut off the threshers heads and send them him some interposed for the time The Lords refused to meddle with the Kingdomes business or to impoverish themselves and were dissolved Rustandus again Congregateth the Bishops at London They did nothing again saith M. Paris too boldly p. 917. Si enim sive juste sive injuste per dictum Magistrum Rustandum suspend●retur quis vel excommunicaretur Rex quasi Leo in abscondito quaerens quem devoraret post 40 dies omnia direperit infiscata Papa Rex v●lut Pastor Lupus in ovium exterminium confoederati omnibus ruinam minabantur And then saith he like blind men groping for the wall the Council were divided and as English men are used to do every one shifteth for himself or seeketh to save himself Tithes are now paid by the Clergy to the Laity They are granted for the Magna Charta which was not kept They are granted as for the holy land and turned against Christians in Apulia Many lies and false oaths are imposed saith M. Paris p. 919. The next year the Clergy were called again 1256. Rustandus the Legate said All Churches are the Popes Leonard the Prolocut r● answered yes to defend not to enjoy and appropriate as we say All things are the Prince's that is to defend and not to disperse And this was the intent of the founders The Legate angry at this answer commanded that henceforth without a Prol●cutor every man should speak for himself that they might be known which astonished and silenced all He commanded them to subscribe a Lie that they had received such sums of money of forreign Merchants and Vsurers which they said it wa● good Martyrdome to die for the refusing of Pag. 920. Here is annexed by M. Paris A charter of King Iohn confirmed by Pope Innocent 3d. ordering that all Bishops be freely elected without the Kings hinderance by the Church vacant and cursing all that otherwise come in pag. 921. § 207. At that time the Romans imprisoned a great Citizen Beaucales for his justice The Bononians detain many Romans pledges for him The Bononians are interdicted sacred things but they yield not till Beaucalco is delivered M. Paris anno 1256. The Letters of Pope Alexander and his many exactions see farther in M. Paris this year § 208. Anno 1257. saith M. Paris some went to Rome for the Bishoprick of Ely and the Church of St. Edmunds and gave and promised so vast sums of money as astonished men with wonder Whereupon the Pope made a new Law that every Elect Bishop should come personally to Rome hoping to have the like prey from others § 209. Anno 1258. saith M. Paris p. 910. The Pope that claimed the Kingdomes of the World was mastered in Rome by the foresaid Senator Braucaleo who being delivered from Prison was beloved of the people executed the Malefactors and his enemies forced the Pope to stay his excommunication and humble himself and beg his mercy § 210. The same year the Pope pretends anger to the King of England for not temperating his excesses and threatneth to excommunicate him The King is afraid and sends him money and stops his mouth p 910. § 211. Against the Parliaments will the King again hearkeneth to the Pope that offereth now the Kingdome of Apulia to Edmund his younger Son as he did before to Edward the Elder But the Parliament denieth him money which he screweth from the Abbeys and Churches § 212. saith M. Paris Sewale Arch-bishop of York now died a Martyr though without blood as many do having constantly fought against the Tyranny of the Roman Court oppressed by the Pope wrote earnestly as Rob. of Lincoln had done to the Pope to cease his tyranny In his sickness sath M. P. he called for water which was fetcht out of the Well and it was turned into excellent Wine p. 969. § 213. How the Parliament of Barons at Oxford this year 1258. entered their Confederacy and resolution to stand against the King for their Liberties Charter and Justice M. Paris p. 972 and many others tell you And p. 974 how the Londoners joyned with them and how many of the Lords were poysoned § 214. Braucaleo the Roman Senator having humbled the Pope pull'd down the Castles of the Tyrants and Rebels put to death the kindred of many Cardinals and died The Pope forbade the Citizens choosing another without his consent They laugh at him and choose Braucaleo's unkle M. P. p. 984. § 215. This Pope Alexander of whom M. Paris speaketh so much evil saith Binnius post obitum suavem sui memoriam reliquit dying 1260. And Pl●tina praiseth him in whom you may see more of his life and Wars against Maufred c. § 216. Next cometh Vrban 4th Patriarch of Ierusalem of whom no great matters are recorded He ordained Corpus Christi day 217. Next cometh Clem. 4th a French Lawyer a Widdower and then Bishop His first good work was to go to Perusium in the habit of a beggar His life is praised by Platina Onuphius Binnius c. How he made a Frenchman Charles King of Scicily and Apulia and how Maufred was kill'd and conquered c. I need not trouble the Reader in reciteing § 218. CCCCXLV In his daies Canisius hath found a small Council at Vienna for reforming some things in the Clergy Bin. p. 1492. § 219. Next cometh Gregory 10th But the Seat was vacant first almost three years So long the Church of Rome was extinct if the Pope be an essential part as they would have him even of the Universal § 220. CCCCXLVI In his time a Council at Lyons called the the 14th Universal approved one by them was held in which the poor Emperour of Constantinople Michael Paleologus being in danger at his wits end came in person to flatter the Pope in hope of help There also was decreed the shutting up of the Cardinals at Elections for fear of vacancies as had happened by discord and delays The Pope interdicted the Florentines because the Guelphes refused to receive the Gibelines which quarrel still cost bloody Wars Rodulph is made Emperour
and the Pope dieth Onuphrius further openeth the Reasons and Rules of the Cardinals being shut up viz. Clem. the 4th being dead the Cardinals as is aforesaid were all so desirous to be Popes themselves that they were two years and nine months contending and could not possibly agree Philip King of France and Charles King of Sicily came themselves to Rome to intreat them but departed without success Yet they invoked the Holy Ghost every day to help them At last the Cardinal Bishop Ioh. Portuensis deridingly prayed them to uncover the houses for the Holy Ghost could not come in through so many covered roofs At last by Bonaventures intreaty they chose Theo●ald a Viseount and Archdeacon that was with our Prince Edward going to fight in Palestine And the ●aid Cardinal Portuens made these Verses on their choice anno 1271. Papatus munus tulit Archidiaconus Vnus Quem Patrem patrum fecit discordia fratrum § 221. Innocent the 5th cometh next the first after the shutting up of the Conclave He sought to end the Italian Wars but died before six moneths reign § 222. CCCCXLVII A Council at Sal●zburge is published by Conisius as in Greg. the 10ths days but it seemeth liker to be after which condemned Pluralities nonresidence of Priests and their being in Taverns or Alehouses and playing at Dice and their wearing long Hair and sine Cloaths and restrained supernumerary begging Schollars and ordered that the Bishop should imprison such as prophaned holy things after they were excommunicated or suspended It seemeth that Bishops had by this time got coercive power but they used it not to bring the unworthy to the Sacrament but to keep the unworthy from it and from other profanations § 223. Next Ottobonus that was Pope Innocent the 4ths Nephew and Legate of England at the Barons Wars is chosen Pope but died before his Consecration within forty dayes but got the name of Hadrian the 5th § 224. Next cometh Pope Iohn the 22th as Platina the 19th as Binius and the 21st as most the 20th by Onuphrius 1276. He was a Physitian made Bishop inverecundi socordis ingenii saith Platina so foolish that he boasted how long he should live when presently the house fell on his head and he died by it in seven days after Suffridus saith Binius saith that he was writing an heretical perverse book when the room fell and cryed out after O what is become of my book Who will finish it which saith Binius if true sheweth the wonderful Providence of God for his Church But had this Pope been infallible had he been in a Council purposed to revoke the decree for shutting up the Cardinals in Conclave and this man finished the revocation and till the dayes of Celestine 5th that renewed it it stood revoked saith Onuphrius § 225. Next came Nicholas 3d. after six months contention and vacancy King Charles as Senator presiding and pleading for a French Pope He is commended much save that he set up all his own Kindred too much § 226. After three years reign eight months and fifteen dayes of Nicholas came M●rtin 2d vulgo 4th saith Binius and Onuphrius a Frenchman In his time the Greek Emperour Paleologus not keeping his promise to the Pope joyned with Peter King of Arragon who claimed Sicily as his Wives inheritance and though the former Pope had set him on this was against him restoring King Charles to be Senator at Rome and siding with him because he was a Frenchman But the fatal Sicilian Vespers killed all the French and Peter overcame Charles and took his Son and Charles and the Pope shortly died of Fevers But before he died the Pope played the old Game excommunicating and cursing King Peter and gave his Kingdom for a prey to any one that would get it and absolved all his Subject from their Oath of Allegiance and signed Croisado's Soldiers under the sign of the Cross to fight against him § 227. Honorius the 4th cometh next his Brother being Senator at Rome He confirmed the same Anathema against Peter King of Arragon who shortly after died of a wound received in fight by the French The Pope dieth and the seat is void ten moneths 1287. after two years Reign § 228. Anno 1287. CCCCXLVIII A Council was held at Herbipolis by the Popes Legate endeavouring to have got the tenth penny of the Estates of the Clergy for the Pope and of the Laity for the Emperour by their joynt consent But Siphridus Arch-Bishop of Colen and Henry Arch-Bishop of Trevers stoutly opposing frustrated both their Conciliary designs § 229. Anno 1288 came P. Nicolas 4th a Religious Man General of the Minors when he had four years together laboured in vain to stay the blood in Italy between the Guelphes and Gi●ellins and to reconcile the French and English and to relieve the Christians in Palestine he died And the Cardinals though for liberty they went to Perusium kept the Church headless two years and three months by contention though Princes in vain endeavoured to perswade them to agreement Are these no intercessions of the Succession In this time died Mich. Paleologus Emperour of Constantinople and the Clergy and Monks would not suffer him to be buried in holy ground because in the Council at Lyons he had consented to the Church of Rome Platina Was this a true Reconciliation of the ●reek Church § 230. Anno 1286. CCCCXLIX A Council at R●v●nna in Honorius time made some Canons for Reformation § 231. Anno 1291. CCCCL A Council at S●lts●urg for reconciling some Christians § 232. Anno 1292. CCCCLI The Arch-bishop of Mentz held a Council at Aschaffenburge which they say did many good things It is not known what § 233. Anno 1294. After two years and four months vacancy Caelestine the 5th a Religious man of solitary life is chosen Pope If ever there was a good Pope it is likely this was one But he was no sooner setled by common applause but the Cardinals especially Bened. Cajetaenus a subtile man perswaded him that his simplicity and unskilfulness would undo the Church and urged him to resign King Charles and the people disswade him and are only for him But the Cardinals prevailed and he resigned And going to his solicitude again the Cardinal Ben. Cajetaue that got him to resign sent him Prisoner to the Castle of Fumo where at best he died of grief Some write that Cardinal Cajetane got a way to speak through a Pipe put into the Wall as if it were some Angel to charge him to resign He was too good to be a Pope § 234. The deceiver that got him out succeeded him called Boniface the 8th by Bin. 7th 1294. This is he of whom it is said Intravit ut vulpes regnavit ut Leo exivit ut Canis He raised Wars to prosecute some Cardinals and the Gibelines While he lived wickedly he set up a Jubilee proclaiming Pardon of all sins to them that would visit
limina Apostolorum that is himself A terrible Earthquake made him for fear set up a hut of boards in an open Meadow lest the houses should fall on him He digg'd up the body of one Hermane that had twenty years been honoured as a Saint and burnt it as a Hereticks He sent a Bishop to Philip● King of France to intreat him to go fight in Palestine and threatened him when he could not intreat him The King imprisoned the Bishop The Pope sent to require him to release him saying openly that the Kingdome of France was divolved to the Church for the contumacy of Phillip and his violating the Law of Nations and bid him Anathematize him and absolve all Frenchmen from the Kings Oath The King let go the Bishop but forbad all his Subjects going to Rome or sending any money thither and not enduring his insolency he assembled his Nobles and declared the Popedome void by Usurpation and unjust enterance of Boniface and appealed to a Council He Coyned money with this Inscription Perdam Babilonis nomen The Pope called a General Council where he gave the Kingdom of France to Albert the Emperour Anathematizing the King The King would not play with him but sends Sciarra and Nogarete to Italy to proclaim his Appeal But Sciarra in a mean habit● gets together many friends that the Pope had oppressed and surprizeth him in his Fathers house breaketh open the doors carrieth him from Avignia to Rome a Prisoner where the thirtieth day he died of grief of whom saith Platina Thus died Boniface who endeavoured more to put terrour than Religion into Emperours Kings Princes Nations and People and to give Kingdomes and take them away to expel men and reduce them at his pleasure unspeakably thirsting for gold which way ever to be gotten Let all Princes Ecclesiastical and Secular saith he learn by this mans example to go before the Clergy and people not proudly and contumaciously as he did but holily and modestly as Christ and his disciples and true imitators and choose rather to be loved than feared from whence the ruine of Tyrants deservedly cometh § 235. Anno 1297. CCCCLII Bin. saith a Council Lugdunense decreed that Princes should not tax their Clergy nor the Clergy pay them without the Popes Consent § 236. Anno 1302 CCCCLIII The Popes General Council at Rome excommunicateth the King of France as aforesaid His Army follow their Captain Pope § 237. Benedict the 11th alias the 10th alias the 9th is next chosen Pope much praised who excommunicated Sciarra and absolved King Philip and died before nine Moneths § 238. Anno 305. Entreth Clemens the 5th the Bishop of Bourdeaux who called the Cardinals to France and setled the Popes Court there where it continued seventy years till the Church and great buildings at Rome were desolate and ruinous saith Platina In his time Albert the Emperour was kill'd by his Nephew Italy confounded by Wars The Pope curseth and interdicteth the Venetians the Florentines the Lucenses Requireth the new chosen Emperor of Luxemburge to come to Rome for Coronation He entereth Italy some Cities fight against him some yield At Rome demanding money they resist and it cometh to force and he is driven back After many bickerings and Cities taken he dieth as is said saith Plat. Poysoned in the Eucharist by a Monk Two fight for the Empire Lodovic Bavour and Frederec Austriae Lodovicus conquereth and maketh himself Emperour Clement burneth two as Hereticks maketh P. Caelestine the 5th a Saint writeth his Clementinus and dieth and again there was no Pope for two years three months and seventeen dayes § 239. CCCCLIV A Council at Saltzburge to get money Tenths for the Pope § 240. CCCCLV Another there Anno 1310. declaring some penalties § 241. CCCCLVI Another at Mentz to extirpate the Templats where some of them rusht in and appealed to the next Pope protesting they were killed and burnt wrongfully without being heard speak for themselves § 242. CCCCLVII But the great Council called by them the 15th General Council approved was at Vienna near France on this occasion King Philip having got the Popedome for Clem. the 5th made him promise to condemn Pope Bonif. the 8th and all his Acts When he had possession he found himself in a streight and Nicholas Cardinal Pratensis advised him to please the King with the hopes that a General Council would do it most effectually and to get the Council out of his Country and power which being done the Council frustrated the Kings expectations The King accused Pope Boniface of Simony Heresie and Perjury in forty Articles His crimes were not denyed but they justified him to be a true Pope and found him not an Heretick In this Council the Templars were condemned and put down and their Lands given to the Ierusalem Hospitalers or Knights of Rhodes which they say King Philip thought to have got some say the Templars were falsly accused of Heresies and the Masters and others burnt Others say truely The most probable is that some particular Men of them no new thing among Soldiers committed many Villainies and the rest suffered for their sakes In this Council the Heresies of Petrus Ioan●is a Disciple of Abbot Ioachim were condemned which were three 1. That the rational Soul as rational is not the form of humane bodies 2. That habitual grace is not infused in Baptism that is alwayes and to Infants 3. That Christs side was pierced with the Launce before he was dead In this Council the Fratricelli and Dulcinists were Condemned and also eight Heresies of the Beguines and Beguards which were these all for perfection which Quakers and some Fryars now seem to be too much for in profession as we all are in desire 1. That man in this life may get such a degree of perfection as that he may become impeccable or sinless and so to rise to no higher a degree of grace Else say they if one might still increase he might grow better than Christ. 2. That when one hath atteined that degree he ought not to fast or pray Because then sensuality is perfectly subject to the Spirit and reason so that a man may then freely grant his body what pleaseth him 3. That they that have got this degree of perfection and the Spirit of liberty are not subject to humane obedience nor bound to any precepts of the Church for where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 4. That thus a man may get final beatitude in all degrees in this life as well as in that to come 5. That every intellectual nature is naturally blessed in it self and the soul needeth not the light of glory for the seeing and enjoying of God 6. That to exercise virtues is a note of imperfection 7. That to kisse a Woman is sin because nature needs it not but copulation is not because nature requireth it when one is tempted 8. That one ought not to rise and to reverence at the elevation of
both to summon a Council they cunningly would not agree of the place and so forced the doing it without them § 265. CCCCLXVII To put a shew on the business Greg. calleth a Council at Aquileia whether by long delays he creepeth with a few to do nothing § 266. CCCCLXVIII And the other Pope Bened. 13. Anno 1409 also calleth his Council in Arragone of his Subjects which calleth it self a General Council and pronounce him the true Pope and no Schismatick or Heretick and Greg. to be the Usurper but exhort him to endeavour Unity § 267. CCCCLXIX The two Popes giving no better hopes some of the Cardinals of both sides slipt from them and by the Countenance of the Florentines and King Ladislaus chose Pisa for a General Council where they met and summoned both the Popes who scorned them and they deposed them both as Hereticks and Schismaticks saith Binius forbidding all Christians to obey them and they chose a third Alexander 5. and the two old ones kept up still and so there were three Popes at once § 268. An. 1409. Alex. 5. is chosen much commended but died in eighteen Months some say saith Antoninus poysoned by a Clyster But to shew himself a Pope in that little time he deposed King Ladislaus and gave his Kingdome to Lewis Duke of Anjou § 269. Balthasar Cossa is next chosen called by some Ioh. 21. by others 22. by others 23. and by Platina Ioh. 24. so little are they agreed of their succession Platina saith the Cardinals of Greg. were yet poor and he hired them with Money to Create him He got Sigismund King of Bohemia chosen Emperour and would have had the Council to be at Rome Italy continued still in blood the Popes having parcelled it into so many small Principalities to secure it against the Emperours no part of the whole World lived from Age to Age in such continual War and confusion This Pope saith Onuphrius Panvinus viz. fuit bello armis quam Religioni aptior utpote qui neque fidem norat neque Religionem rebus profanis magis quam Divino cultu accommodatus How he was accused deposed imprisoned how the other two Popes Greg. 12. and Bened. 13. were all deposed with him and Martin 5. chosen the next Chapter sheweth CHAP. XIII The Council of Constance Basil and some others § 1. CCCCLXX AN. 1414. the Council of Constance was called by the means of the Emperour Sigismund and the consent of Pope Iohn who the more trusted the Emperour because he had promoted him There were then three Popes Bened. 13. in France whom the Kingdomes of France Spain Arragon England and Scotland followed and Greg. 12. and Iohn 23. at Rome that divided the rest of the Papalines It was not certainly to represent the Trinity but to profane the Name and abuse the Kingdome of the blessed Trinity Oct. 28. P. Iohn called by them Sanctissimus Dominus Noster entereth the City Nov. 5. The Pope began the Council Nov. 16. was the first Session the Pope speaking to them and his Bull being read shewing that he would have had the Council at Rome but the miserable case of Rome by contention and confusion hindering it was agreed with the Emperour to be at Constance commanding to be there for the peace of the Church and appointing a Weekly Mass to be said for obtaining Gods blessing and pardoning a years penance for every Mass to every Mass-Priest that said it exhorting all to fasting and prayer for good success charging them to look after Errours especially those that rose from one Iohn Wickliff and also to reform the Church c. March 2. 1415. The Pope took an Oath for the peace of the Church to lay down his Popedome if the other two Popes would do the same and the Emperour kist his feet The Cardinal of Florence read these Decrees 1. That the Council was lawfully called 2. That it will not be dissolved by the departure of the Pope or other Prelates 3. That it be not dissolved till the present Schisme be healed and the Church reformed in Faith and Manners in Head and Members 4. That it be not removed but on just cause 5. That the Bishops depart not § 2. In the fourth Session they decreed that the general Council representing the militant Catholick Church hath its power immediately from Christ to which every man of what State or dignity soever though it be Papal is bound to obey in the things that belong to Faith and the extirpation of the said Schism and the general reformation of the Church in head and members 2. That the Pope withdraw not himself or the Officers and if he should or should thunder out Church censures against them or any adhering to the Council they are void 3. That no Translations Promotions or Cardinals be made to the prejudice of the Council 4. That three of each Nations be chosen to judge of departures c. But the Pope fled and sent them word that it was not for fears but for his health § 3. Sess. 5. The Emperor being among them they decreed again the Power of the Council as immediately from Christ which the Pope and all must obey and that the Pope is punishable if he disobey that he is bound to surrender in any case of great and evident profit to the Church that he unlawfully departed that if he will return and perform his promise he shall be safe Next they proceeded to condemn the Books of Iohn Wickliff and to prosecute Iohn Huss Next they applied themselves to the Emperour to reduce the Pope who told them he was in the hands of the Duke of Austria but if they pleased he would write to him or try to fetch him by force c. § 4. Sess. 6. They order the Procuration for the Popes Resignation to be demanded and Process to be made against Iohn Huss and Hierome of Prague A Letter is read from the University of Paris to the Pope to submit to the Council § 5. Sess. 7. They accused Hierome of Prague for not appearing and summoned the Pope promising him safe Conduct sed salvâ Iustitiâ c. § 6. Sess. 8 They condemned Wickliff's Bones to be dig'd up upon 45 Articles instead of 260 which they had gathered Art 1. was 1. That the substance material of Bread and Wine remain in the Sacrament of the Altar 2. The Accidents of Bread remain not without the substance 3. Christ is not identically and really in his proper bodily presence in the Sacrament 4. If a Bishop or Priest live in mortal sin he Ordaineth not Baptizeth not Consecrateth not 5. The Gospel saith not that Christ instituted the Mass. 6. God ought to obey the Devil 7. If a man be contrite aright outward confession is needless and unprofitable 8. If the Pope be a Reprobate and wicked and so a Member of the Devil he hath no power over the faithful given him by any but Caesar. 9. Since Vrban the
6. none is to be taken for Pope but we must live as the Greeks under our own Laws 10. It is against Scripture that Church-men have possession that is they should not labour to be rich 11. No Prelate should excommunicate any one unless he know that God hath first excommunicated him And he that so excommunicateth is thereby a Heretick or Excommunicate 12. A Prelate that excommunicateth a Clerk who appealed to the King or to the Council of the Kingdome is thereby a Traytor to the King and Kingdome 13. They that give over Preaching or hearing Gods Word for mens Excommunication are Excommunicate and in the Day of Judgment shall be judged Traytors to Christ. 14. It is lawful for a Deacon or Presbyter to preach the Word of God without the Authority of the Apostolick Seal or a Catholick Bishop 15. No one is a Civil Lord or a Prelate or a Bishop while he liveth in mortal sin The meaning of this is no open wicked man is a Subject capable of such Authority given by Christ as shall warrant him to use the place but his acts may be valued to others in many cases Dispositio materiae est necessaria ad formam recipiendam As an Infidel can be no Bishop or Pastor 16. Temporal Lords may take away temporal goods from the Church from a Possessor habitually criminal and not only in act Not from the sacred use in general but from that man that forfeiteth them 17. The people may correct their Delinquent Lords This is not to be believed to be Wickliff's sense till they cite his own words which no doubt limit it to the cases 18. Tythes are meer Alms and the Parishioners may take them away for their Prelates sins 19. The special prayers applied by Prelates and Religious men to one person profit him no more than the general ones caeteris paribus 20. He that giveth Alms to Fryars is thereby Excommunicate that is he sins by cherishing wilful idleness 21. He that enters the private Religion either of the Possessing or the Mendicant Fryars becomes less fit and able to keep the Commandments of God 22. Holy men that made private Religions thereby sinned 23. The Religious living in private Religion are not therein of the Christian Religion 24. Fryars are bound to get their living by the labour of their hands and not by begging 25. They are Simoniacal that bind themselves to pray for others for a temporal reward or price 26. The prayers of Reprobates wicked men availeth not to any 27. All things come to pass by necessity 28. The Confirmation of Youth the Ordination of Clerks the Consecration of Places are reserved to the Pope and Bishops for covetousness of temporal gain and honour 29. Universities Studies Colledges Degrees and Masterships in them are introduced by vain Gentility and profit the Church as much as the Devil doth 30. The Excommunication of a Pope or any Prelate is not to be feared because it is the Censure of Antichrist 31. They that found Cloysters sin and they are Diabolical that enter them 32. To enrich the Clergy is against Christs Rule 33. Pope Sylvester and the Emperour Constantine erred in inriching the Church 34. All the Order of Begging Fryars are Hereticks and those that give to them are Excommunicate 35. They that enter Religion as Fryars or any Order of them are thereby disabled from keeping Gods Commands and so of coming to Heaven unless they forsake them 36. The Pope and all his Clergy that have Possessions are therefore Hereticks and the Secular Lords and Laicks that consent to them to their great riches 37. The Church of Rome is the Synagogue of Satan and the Pope is not the immediate and nearest Vicar of Christ and the Apostles 38. The Decretal Epistles are Apocryphal and seduce from the Faith of Christ and the Clerks that study them are fools 39. The Emperour and Secular Lords were seduced by the Devil to inrich the Church excessively he meaneth with temporal goods 40. The Election of the Pope by Cardinals was introduced by the Devil 41. It is not necessary to Salvation to believe the Church of Rome to be the Supreme among other Churches 42. It is foolish to trust to the Indulgences of the Pope and Bishops 43. Oaths made to strengthen humane Contracts and Civil Commerce are unlawful 44. Augustine Benedict Bernard are damned unless they repented of having possessions and instituting and entering private Religions and so from the Pope to the lowest Religious Fryar they are all Hereticks 45. All Religions that is Orders of Fryars were introduced by the Devil This Article about Necessity of Events I see in Wickliff's Books is his own and many here cited are true but no doubt but many of them are perverted by their wording them and leaving out the Explicatory Context The Council forbad his Books and condemned them to be burnt and reprobated every one of all these foresaid Articles with all the 260. The Duke of Austria most humbly begged the Emperours pardon for receiving the Pope § 7. Sess. 9. The Citation of the Pope is read and Commissaries and Judges appointed and a Letter read from the University of Paris instigating the Council to their duty for their honest Chancellour Gerson was here § 8. Sess. 10. The Popes Suspension was read The Sess. 11. the Articles against the Pope are read which were proved which were in sum as followeth Art 1. That the Pope Iohn from his Youth was of a naughty disposition impudent a lyar rebellious against his Parents given to most Vices and so was and still is accounted of all that know him Cardinals Arch-Bishops Bishops c. witness it 2. He gathered riches by Symony and wicked means 3. By these Symoniacal riches he purchased a Cardinals place at great rates 4. Possessing Bononia as Legate by tyranny and cruel exactions inhumanely and impiously he ruined the people without all Justice or Piety c. 5. Getting thus to be Pope like a Pagan he contemned all Divine Offices 6. That he is the oppressor of the poor the persecutor of Justice the Pillar of the unjust the Statue of Simoniacks the servant of the Flesh the dregs of Vices a stranger to Virtue flying publick Consistories wholly given to sleep and other fleshly desires wholly contrary to Christ in life and manners the Glass of Infamy and the profound Inventer of all wickednesses or malice so scandalous to the Church that among faithful Christians that knew him he was commonly called THE DEVIL INCARNATE 7. That as a Vessel of all sins he repulsed the worthy and gave all Offices Benefices and Church-promotions to the bad that would give most Money for them 8. Hereby the whole Church Clergy and People fell under infamy and scandal 9. That of all these he was oft admonished and humbly intreated 10. That he was worse after than before laying all pretence of Justice and openly selling all to the worst that would give him money 11. That growing
yet stronger in Vices he made divers Officers purposely to manage his Simony as his Bailiffs for all fat Cathedrals Abbeys Monasteries Priorles and vacant Benefices reserved c. 12. That he charged his Registers to receive all the money before they granted c. 13. That he appointed certain Merchants to put vacant Benefices in the Balance and grant their Petitions that offered most for them 14. He ordered that no Petition for a Benefice be offered him till it were signed by the Refundary who then was to pay it out of his own Estate if he took too little 15. That against God and his Conscience he oft sold his Bulls to Eminent men in which he wrote that they that had Benefices had resigned them to him and that by lying forged Resignation which never was made sold them again for great sums and beggar'd many 16. By this it came to pass that without all difficulty he that gave most carried it And the same course was held in Sacraments Indulgences Dispensations and other Ecclesiastical and Spiritual Gifts 17. That he usually sold the same Benefice divers times over to divers persons or to the same silencing Claims of Right whereby the whole Church was defiled with Simony filled with the unworthy both in higher and lower Prelacies c. 18. That he refused to Confirm those that were Canonically Elected unless even to satiety they glutted him with Money putting the unworthy in their stead and translated men against their wills from their Churches that he might sell them dearer 19. That promising Church-Reformation in the Council at Pisa he called one at Rome and being there publickly admonished being incorrigible by the Devils instinct did worse 20. That he sold for Money Indulgences at the hour of death the Predication of the Cross Absolutions from fault and punishment Concessions of Churches and portable Altars Consecrations of Bishops Benedictions of Abbots Relicks of Saints Holy Orders power in Confession to absolve from sins and Acts that may be ministred only by the Operations of the Holy Ghost for Grace 21. That one Nic. Pistorius a Florence Merchant and the Popes Secretary a Lay married man was made by the Pope his Legate Apostolical sent into Brabant to exact and receive a Subsidy which was the tenth part of the fruit of all Benefices in divers Cities and Diocesses and to excommunicate the refusers by a certain deputed Sublegate and suspend Colledges Covents Chapters c. 22. That he authorized this Nicholas to grant to all persons of each Sex for Money to choose their Confessors that might absolve from fault and punishment by which the Merchant got vast sums of Money seducing the people 23. That all the Premises are known true proved c. 24. That Anno 1412. Ambassadors from the King Bishops and Universities of France admonished him charitably of this scandalous infamous Simony 25. That he amended not by it but did worse 26. That he is defamed of all this in all Kingdomes of the Christian World 27. That he abused Rome and the Churches Patrimony exhausting the people and imbursing it himself by Taxes Gabels c. Many instances are added 28. For these things many Crimes Sacriledges Adulteries Murders Spoils Rapine and Thefts were committed in Rome through his fault 29. It is the common voice opinion assertion and belief that in these and innumerable other evils he is the greatest Dilapidator and Dissipator of the Church Affairs that ever was scandalous to the Universal Church a Witch a Murderer a Killer of his Brethren Incontinent in all things serving the Vices of the flesh of infinite crimes called infamously Balderinus 30. That all this is notorious by common fame repute c. 31. That he hath sold the goods of Cardinals Bishopricks Parishes Colledges Priories c. 32. And this not only in the City about many instances named 33. That he destroyed University Studies by taking the Salaries to himself 34. Besides he laid such burdens on the Parsons as forced them to sell the Church-goods Ornaments and Books 35. That hereby the whole Church was notoriously scandalized 36. The Infamy was so great that Princes and the Emperour besought him to amend 37. Hereupon he promised to amend and to call this Council 38. But he went on and did worse than before 39. He forbad the righting of the injured in judgment 40. That the Bishop of Salisbury and other English Embassadours admonished him to amend and he gave them ill words and threatned and abused them 41. That at Constance he swore to resign for Peace 42. And he promised to submit to the judgment of the Council 43. He bid all say what they would against him 44. He was humbly intreated by the Council to perform his word 45. Yet thought by hiding himself to evade 46. Yet he professed before that he intended not to depart 47. And when the Church longed for peace by the Council he plotted to dissolve the Council and so fled in a disguized habit 48. He fled to Schafhausen and commanded some Cardinals and Bishops to come to him 49. Thence he fled to Lauffenberge and towards Brisac 50. The Council desired his return 51. He denied to answer but fled to Nurenburg to frustrate the Council 52. He is an obdurate sinner and incorrigible Fautor of Schism c. 53. That all this is notorious and the common repute of men 54. And all the premises are the common fame and voice Here somewhat is left out And they begin as anew 1. Declaring his wickedness from his Youth 2. That he is notoriously suspected to have poysoned Pope Alexander and h●s Physitian Daniel 3. That he committed Incest with his Brothers Wife and with the holy Nuns and ravished Maids and committed Adultery with Wives and other crimes of Incontinence 3. That he Simonaically sold six Parish Churches in Bononia to Lay men who set Priests in them at their pleasure 4. That for Money he sold the Mastership of the Order of S. Iohn of Ierusalem in Cyprus to a Child of five years old Bastard to the King of Cyprus with the fruits of Vacancies and spoils of the last Master c. 5. That he would not recall this but on condition 1. That the K. of Cyprus should be paid by them that succeeded all the Money back which he gave to the Pope 2. That the Pope should have more six thousand Florins of Gold which the Prior of Rhodes paid and for which the Hospitallers are yet in debt 3. He reserved for the said Bastard the Magistral Chamber worth two thousand Florins 4. That the said Pope Iohn gave Fryar Iacobus de Vitriaco an ancient man and expresly professing the Hospitallers Religion an Absolution from his Vows Rule and habit of Religion and reduced him to a Secular life and Marriage c. for six hundred Ducats Many other Articles I pass by as tedious to be repeated One was That he was a notorious Simoniack and a pertinacious Heretick Another was That often
the Popes Heresie The rest is worth the reading but too long for me to repeat Much of it is to shew that Reading and Massing is more needful than Preaching and that every Priest that Masseth is not bound to Preach there needeth many Mass-Priests and not so many Preachers and that silenced excommunicated Priests are bound to cease preaching and obey the Prelates But he had the wit to add if silenced for a reasonable cause and to confess that Sententia injuste lata à suo judice si errorem inducat vel poceatum mortale afferet nec timenda est nec tenenda Pag. 364. He denieth that it is any Precept of Christ 1. To receive the Cup 2. Or that Priests Preach 3. Orto abolish all mortal sin 4. Or for the Clergy not to be Civil Governours c. IV. Ioh. de Pole●nar Archdiacon Barcinon hath a Treatise of three days speech for the Civil Power of the Clergy in which he mis-spendeth much time in disputing for their Propriety when as the Bohemians took Dominion for Empire or civil forcing power of Government and for inordinate possessions of Lordships and great wealth § 36. The Papists confess that this Council was Vniversal and rightly called and confirmed but they pretend that it was partly reprobate by the Popes removal of the Council and that Pope Nicholas 5. approved it but in part It began 1431. and continued above eleven years § 37. CCCCLXXIII An. ●438 A Council at Bridges concurred with this at Basil making the Pragmatical Sanction decreeing that a General Council be called every ten years and confirming the Council at Basil. § 38. CCCCLXXIV Next cometh the Anti-Council at Ferrary and Florence where the attempt for Union with the distressed Greeks was made all the passages whereof are so fully opened in the Greeks History published by Dr. Creighton that I shall say no more of it Here note that there were two General Councils at once and how could they both or either of them be truly Universal The Papists call it the sixteenth § 39. After many Wars Eugenius the deposed Pope died An. 1447. having made twenty seven Cardinals against the Council of Basils Decrees from whom is their succession and Nicholas the 5. succeeded him Italy still continued in bloody Wars Pope Faelix at last resigned and so there was once more but one Pope And that you may see still how far the Pope was from governing all the World the City of Rome was again seeking to recover their Liberties and had a Plot against him one Steph. Hircanius being the Chief and the Pope secured himself by hanging many of them § 40 The Emperour of Constantinople and those Bishops that pretended a Union with Rome in hope of help found the people and Clergy there utterly averse to come under the Pope and they had no help from him nor any of their desired successes for now the Turks took the City and killed the Emperour and many thousands more and 1455. the Pope died § 41. CCCCLXXV A Council at Tours about Church Orders decreed praying oft for the dead forbad Clandestine Marriages and Massing in unconsecrated places c. § 42. CCCCLXXVI A Synod at Lyons to end the Schisms between the two Popes done by the Emperour Frederick who desired King Charles concurrence § 43. An 1455 Calixtus the 3. is made Pope he raiseth a Sea Army against the Turks the Patriarch of Aquil●ia being Captain Rome was still in War He claimed the Kingdome of Naples to the Church for want of Heirs an Anti-Pope was also made called Clement 8. but being perswaded to resign he accepted a Bishoprick Many Cities in Italy ruined by Earthquakes whose ruines Platina saith he saw with admiration He made a new Holy-day for Christs Transfiguration § 44. Next cometh Aeneas Sylvius called Pius 2. one of the most learned of all the Popes especially an Orator He was against the Pope for the superiority of Councils at Basil but when he was made Pope he recanted it In his Epistle to his Father he excuseth himself for having a Bastard and for fornication particularly with an English Woman that lodged in the same house with him telling him that he was not an Eunuch and remembering his Father what a Cock of the Game he had been himself but among the Popes he was a wonder of worthiness He was vehement for a War with the Turks but could not so far quench the flames of War at his own doors in Italy and other Christian Countries as to accomplish it Platina recordeth many of his Sentences among which are Every Sect established by Authority is void of humane reason If the Christian Religion had not been approved by Miracles it should have been received for its honesty The Mortals measures of Heaven and Earth are more bold than true Astronomy is more pleasant than profitable The Friends of God are happy here and hereafter There is no solid joy without virtue They that know most doubt most Artificial Orations move fools not wise men As all Rivers flow into the Sea so all Vices into great mens Courts Flatterers rule Kings as they list Princes hear none so readily as accusers The tongue of a flatterer is the worst plague to a King He that ruleth many is ruled by many He is unworthy the name of a King who measureth the publick affairs by his own commodity c. Ill Physitians kill bodies and unskilful Priests souls Virtues enrich the Clergy Vice impoverisheth them Marriage was for great reasons forbidden Priests and for greater is to be restored to them He that too much pardoneth his Son cherisheth his Enemy The covetous never please men but by dying Lying is a servile vice c. You may see his R●cantation in Binius where his Dignity raised him so high as to say That the Greek and Latin Doctors with one voice say that he cannot be saved that holdeth not the Vnity of the Roman Church and all those Virtues are maimed to him that refuseth to obey the Pope though lying in sackcloth and ashes he fast and pray day and night and seem in other things to fulfill the Law of God because obedience is better than sacrifice and every soul must be subject to the higher power and it is manifest that the Pope of Rome is placed in the top or Crown of the Church from which his power of Government we know that no Sheep of Christ at all is exempted O then how much worse is the case of the Abassines Armenians Greeks Protestants even three fourth parts of the Christian World than of the Heathens being all certainly damned for not believing in the Pope How much more necessary to Salvation is it to please and honour the Pope than any Angel or Saint in Heaven But how false is it that the Greek and Latine Fathers all agree in this § 45. Paulus 2. succeedeth Pius a man just and clement saith Platina himself yet saith he before he was Pope
Rome by the Emperour Charles the 5th army under Charles Duke of Bourbon and all the progress of their broils Historians have at large recorded and therefore I shall pretermit § 64. The day before Charles the 5th was chosen Emperour the Senate of Electas chose Iohn Frederick Duke of Saxony but he ingenti animo recusavit refused it and being asked whom he thought most eligible he said none but Charles was fit For this noble mind he was offered 30000 Florens of money which he constantly rejected And when they urged him that 10000 might be given to his servants he said let them that will take it but he that taketh any shall not stay to morrow with me and taking horse went his waies lest they further troubled him Thus saith Erasmus Epist. l 13. ●p 4. I was assured of by the Bishop of Liege that was presen●t See B●●●●zar Chronol p. 533. § 65. The Reformation forced the German Bishops to make many reforming Canons at Colen c. Among those of an Augustine Synod our own strife about communicating maketh me think of no loss of time to recite their Catalogue of persons that were to be denied the Sacrament of Communion viz. as followeth 1. Heathens Infidels and Hereticks 2. The Excommunicate 3. All men at a time of common Interdict 4. Men that go from their own Parishes for it 5. Those that are under age And distracted possessed Ideots 6. Those that are troubled with crudity of stomacks till cured 7. Infamous persons as Juglers Players Jesters c. 8. Women that wear Mens apparel 9. Separatists and Conventiclers 10. The Sect of the Beggars of Lyons 11. The superstitious 12. Those that have not contrition and confession living in sin 13. That live in notorious wickedness as Adultery Usury c. till their actual reformation 14. Deserters of Marriage unallowed 15. Those that play much at Dice 16. That are given to drunkenness gluttony comessations spend daies in Taverns And if they amend not they are to be put to death 17. That detain other mens goods 18. That break and spoil Temples 19. That encroach on others lands and grounds 20. Servants that being corrected refuse their duty to their Master after it 21. They that use false weights and measures 22. That pay not Tythes 23. That delay to execute Testaments 24. That obstinately despise the Customes of the Church and meet elsewhere 25. That disturb the Preachers or go out of Church contemptuously 26. That will not hear Mass and stay the end 27. That use unnecessary labour on the Lords day or holy daies 28. That marry secretly 29. That slothfully or contemptuously refuse to learn the Lords prayer and Creed 30. That blaspheme or prophanely swear 31. That reproach and dishonour Priests 32. Murderers Enemies revengeful and oppressors 33. That preserve not carefully their Childrens Lives 34. That make Laws against Church Liberties or Judge by such Laws or lay burdens and exactions on Churchmens persons or goods 35. Those that judge that money received on Usury is not to be restored § 66. The Reformers accusations of the Popish Clergy had this effect to make them confess many of their faults especially drunkenness and Whoredome as being the cause of the peoples distaste and desertion see the Orations at the Councils of Augusta and Trevers and the Council at Trevers made strict Canons against them especially for removing Concubines from the Priests And one at Colen 1549. is large for some reformation but especially careful to keep out true Reformation forbidding the books of Protestants by name Among other things they forbid baptizing Children in private houses except Kings Children c. And another Council at Mentz hath the whole sum of the Roman Doctrine and Discipline at the best save the matters of the Papacy and these late provincial Councils made Canons in the frame of them not much of our English Canons and our Articles of Religion set together And another Council at Trevers repeateth their disciplinary Canons in part and addeth more § 67. The History and Canons of the Council of Trent are sufficiently published and Pope Pius his Oath conjoyned so that I need not speak of that which I intend not to make any part of the matter of this Epitome which extendeth but to the time of Luthers Reformation 68. Even after the Reformation the Pope could not live in Italy without fighting Pope Iulius the 3d fought with Octavius Farnesius at Parma Pope Paul sought with the King of Spain but was beaten He set sixteen Cardinals over the Inquisition the defence of his Kingdome He imprisoned Cardinal Morrovius suspected of heresie absolved after by Pope Pius the 4th who yet strangled Caraffa and beheaded Cardinal Leonard Count Montarius c. § 69. Cardinal Charles Borrhomeus sainted by them at divers Millane Councils shewed a great deal of Reforming and some deforming zeal In the first Council I shall note that they decreed that men once admitted to the Communion and returning to their sin be no more admitted till the Priest see that they have actually reformed their lives And that before any young persons first receive they shall some dayes be examined and taught the use and reason of the Sacrament Priests notoriously criminal must not say Mass till they amend their lives No Physician must give physick to any after four dayes sickness that is not confest to the Priest on pain of excommunication Bishops are forbidden to stand when Princes sit no not for saying Grace at meat nor otherwise to depress and abject themselves to Princes Parish Priests must have a book of the Names Sex Age and State of every Parishioner Whores are to dwell in their assigned places and to be known by their apparel from others Dancing Playes Dice Selling c. forbidden on the Lords dayes and holy dayes Indeed the Roman Religion was never set out with greater advantage of piety and reformation than in the copious Decrees of Carolus Borrhomeus in the Milan Councils To which a Council at Aquileia added endeth Binnius his History of Councils § 70. In all this History of Councils Bishops and Patriarchs it appeareth that Corruptio optimi est pessima As the sacred Ministry in pious humble wise peaceable and sincere men hath been Gods great means of planting ordering preserving and encreasing his Church and converting edifying and saving Souls and such to this day are as Paul called Timothy not the Church A Pillar and Basis of the truth in the Church which is the House of the Living God the Husbandmen that still cultivate the Vineyard of the Lord while with self-denial and faith and heavenly minds they labour to promote holy WISDOME LOVE SPIRITUALITY and PEACE abhorring pride and worldly designs and being mostly little noted in the Histories of the Church as not appearing in the turbulent and publick affairs of the world so contrarily Pride and worldliness seeking Dominion favour and wealth to feed also sensuality with fleshly pleasure by Satans great diligence