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A67922 Actes and monuments of matters most speciall and memorable, happenyng in the Church. [vol. 1] with an vniuersall history of the same, wherein is set forth at large the whole race and course of the Church, from the primitiue age to these latter tymes of ours, with the bloudy times, horrible troubles, and great persecutions agaynst the true martyrs of Christ, sought and wrought as well by heathen emperours, as nowe lately practised by Romish prelates, especially in this realme of England and Scotland. Newly reuised and recognised, partly also augmented, and now the fourth time agayne published and recommended to the studious reader, by the author (through the helpe of Christ our Lord) Iohn Foxe, which desireth thee good reader to helpe him with thy prayer.; Actes and monuments Foxe, John, 1516-1587. 1583 (1583) STC 11225; ESTC S122167 3,006,471 816

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the law was iustified for by the workes of the law shall no flesh be iustified Galat. 2. And agayne in the same epistle cap. 3. that by the lawe no man is iustified before God it is manifest for the iust man shall liue by his fayth the law is not of fayth but whosoeuer hath the workes therof shal liue in them And agayn in the same chap. If the law had bene geuen which might haue iustified then our righteousnesse had come by the law But the scripture hath concluded all vnder sinne that the promise might be sure by the fayth of Iesu Christ to all beleuers Moreouer before that fayth came they were kept and concluded all vnder the law vntill the comming of that fayth whiche was to be reuealed For the law was our schoolemaister in Christ Iesu that we should be iustified by fayth Also the sayd Paul Rom. 5. sayth that the law entred in the meane time whereby that sinne might more abound Where then sinne hath more abounded there hath also grace superaboūded that like as sinne hath raigned vnto death so that grace might raigne also by righteousnes vnto eternal life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Whereby it is manifest that by the fayth which we haue in Christ beleuing him to be the true sonne of God which came downe from heauen to redeme vs from sinne we are iustified from sinne and so do liue by him which is the true breade and meat of the soule And the bread which Christ gaue is his flesh geuen for the life of the world Iohn 6. For he being God came downe from heauen and being true carnall man did suffer in the flesh for our sinnes which in his diuinity he could not suffer Wherefore like as we beleue by our fayth that he is true God so must we also beleue that he is a true man And then do we eate the bread of heauen and the fleshe of Christ. And if we beleue that he did voluntarily shed hys bloud for our redemption then do we drinke his bloud And thus except we eate the flesh of the sonne of man and shall drinke his bloud we haue not eternall life in vs. Because the flesh of Christ verily is meate and hys bloud is drinke in deed and whosoeuer eateth the flesh of Christ and drinketh his bloud abideth in Christ Christ in him Ioh. ca. 6. And as in this world that soules of the faythfull liue and are refreshed spiritually with this heauenly bread and with the flesh and bloud of christ So in the world to come the same shall liue eternally in heauen refreshed with the deity of Iesus Christ as touching the most principall part therof that is to wit intellectū For as much as this bread of heauē in that it is God hath in it selfe all delectable pleasātnes And as touching the intelligible powers of the same as well exteriour as interior they are refreshed with the flesh that is to say with the humanitye of Iesus Christ which is as a queene standing on the right hand of God decked with a golden robe of diuers coulours for this queen of heauen alone by the word of God is exalted aboue the company of all the angels that by her all our corporal power intellectiue may fully be refreshed as is our spirituall intelligence with the beholding of the deity of Iesus Christ and euen as the Aungels shall we be fully satisfied And in the memory of this double refectiō present in this world and in the world to come hath Christ geuen vnto vs for eternal blessednes the Sacrament of his body and bloud in the substaunce of breade and wine as it appeareth in Mathew chapter 26. As the disciples sat at supper Iesus tooke bread and blessed it brake it gaue it vnto his disciples and sayd Take eate this is my bodye And he tooke the cup and thanked and gaue it them saying Drinke ye all of this this is my bloud of the new Testament which shall be shed for many for the remission of sinnes And Luke in his Gospell chap. 22. or this matter thus writeth And after he had taken the bread he gaue thankes he brake it and gaue it vnto them saying Thys is my body whyche shall be geuen for you doe you this in my remembraunce In like maner he tooke the cup after supper saying Thys is the cup of the new testament in my bloud which shall be shed for you That Christ said this is my body in shewing to them the bread I firmely beleue know that it is true That Christ for so much as he is God is the very trueth it selfe and by consequence all that he sayth is true And I beleue that the very same was his body in such wise as he willed it to be his body for in that he is almighty he hath done what so euer pleased him And as in Cane of Galile he chaunged the water into wine really so that after the transubstantiation it was wine and not water so when he sayd This is my body If he would haue had the breade really to be transubstātiated into his very body so that after this chaunging it should haue bene his naturall body not bread as it was before I know that it must needes haue beene so But I finde not in the Scripture that hys will was to haue any such reall transubstantiation or mutation And as the Lord God omnipotent in his perfectiō essential being the sonne of God doth exceed the most purest creature and yet when it pleased him he took vpō him our nature remaining really God as he was before was really made man so that after this assumpting of our substaūce he was really very God very man Euē so if he would when he sayd This is my body He could make this to be his body really the bread still really remayning as it was before For lesse is the difference of the essence betwene bread and the body of a man then betwene the deity humanity because that of the bread is naturally made the body of a man Of the bread is made bloud of the bloud naturall seede and of naturall seede the naturall substaunce of man is ingendred But in that that God became man This is an action supernatural Wherefore he that could make one man to be very God and very mā could if he would make one thing to be really very bread his very body But I do not finde it expresly in the Scripture that he would any such Identitye or coniunction to be made And as Christ sayd I am very bread not chaunging his essence or being into the essence or substaunce of bread but was the sayde Christ which he was before really and yet bread by a similitude or figuratiue speech So if he would it might be that when he sayd This is my body That this should really haue bene the bread as it was before and
priest haddē their part of sacrifices and the first bygeten beastes and other things as the lawe telleth And Lorde S. Paul thy seruant sayth that the order of the priesthode of Aaron ceased in Christes comming and the lawe of that priesthode For Christ was end of sacrifices yoffered vpō the crosse to the father of heauen to bring man out of sinne and become himself a priest of Melchisedeks order For he was both king priest without beginning and end and both the priesthoode of Aaron and also the law of that priesthode ben ychaunged in the comming of Christ. And S. Paul sayth it is reproued for it brogh● no man to perfection For bloude of gotes ne of other beastes ne might done away sinne for to that Christ shad his bloud A Lord Iesu wether thou ordenest an order of priests to offrē in the auter thy flesh and thy bloude to bringen men out of sinne and also out of peine And whether thou geue them alonelych a power to eat thy flesh and thy bloud and wether none other man may eate thy flesh and thy bloud with outen leue of priestes Lord we beleeuen that thy flesh is verey meate and thy bloude verey drinke and who eateth thy flesh and drinketh thy bloud dwelleth in thee and thou in him and who that eateth this bread shall liue without end But Lord thine disciples sayd this is an hard worde but thou answerest them and seidest When yee seeth mans soone stiuen vp there hee was rather the spirite is that maketh you liue the wordes that yche haue spoken to you ben spirite life Lord yblessed more thou be for in this worde thou teachest vs that hee that kepeth thy wordes and doth after them eateth thy fleshe and drinketh thy bloude and hath an euerlasting life in thee And for we shoulden haue minde of thys liuing thou gauest vs the sacrament of thy flesh and bloud in forme of bred and wine at thy supper before that thou shouldest suffer thy death and tooke bread in thine hand and saidest take ye this and eate it for it is my body and thou tookest wine and blessedest it and sayde thys is the bloud of a new and an euerlasting testament that shall be shed for many men in forgeuenes of sinnes as oft as ye haue done doo ye this in minde of me A Lord thou ne bede not thine disciples makē this a sacrifice to bring men out of paines gif a priest offred thy body in the alter but thou bede them go and fullen all the folke in the name of the father the sonne and the holy ghost in forgeuenes of their sinnes and teache ye them to keepe those thynges that ych haue cōmanded you And Lord thine disciples ne ordeined not priests principallich to make thy body in sacrament but for to teach the people and good husbandmen that well gouern their housholds both wiues children their meiny they ordeind to be priests to teachen other men the law of Christ both in worde in dede they liuedein as true Christen men euery day they eaten Christes body and drinken his bloude to the sustenance of liuing of theyr soules and otherwhiles they tooken the sacrament of his body in forme of bread and wine in mind of our Lord Iesu Christ. But all this is turned vpse downe for now who so will liuen as thou taughtest he shal ben holden a foole And gif he speake thy teaching he shal ben holden an heretick accursed Lord yhaue no l●nger wonder hereof for so they seiden to thee whē thou wer here some time And therefore wee moten take in pacience theyr wordes of blasphemy as thou didest thy selfe or els we weren to blame And truelych Lord I trowe that if thou were nowe in the world and taughtest as thou diddest some time thou shuldest ben done to death For thy teaching is damned for heresy of wise men of the world and then moten they nedes ben heretickes that teachen thy lore and all they also that trauelen to liue thereafter And therfore Lord gif it be thy wil helpe thine vnkunning lewde seruaunts that wolen by their power and their kunning helpe to destroy sinne Leue Lorde sithe thou madest woman in helpe of man in a more fraile degree then man is to be gouerned by mans reason What perfection of charity is in these priests and in men of religion that haue forsaken spoushod that thou ordeinedst in Paradise betwixt man and woman for perfection to forsaken traueile and liuen in ease by other mens traueile For they mow not do bodilich workes for defouling of their handes with whom they touchen thy precious body in the aulter Leue Lorde gif good men forsaken the company of woman nedes they moten haue the gouernaile of man then motē they ben ycoupled with shrewes and therfore thy spoushode that thou madest in clennes from sinne it is nowe ychaunged into liking of the flesh And Lord this is a great mischiefe vnto thy people And young priestes and men of religion for defaulte of wiues maken many women horen and drawen through their euell ensample many other men to sinne and the ease that they liuen in and their welfare is a great cause of this mischiefe And Lord me thinketh that these ben quaint orders of religion and none of thy sect that wolen taken horen whilke God forfendes and forsaken wiues that God ne forfendeth not And forsaKen trauail that God commaunds and geuen their selfe to idlenes that is the mother of all noughtines And Lorde Mary thy blessed mother and Ioseph touched oftentimes thy body and wroughten with their honds and liueden in as much clennes of soule as our priestes done nowe and touched thy body and thou touchedest them in their soules And Lorde our hope is that thou goen not out of a poore mans soule that traueileth for his liuelode with his handes For Lord our beliefe is that thine house is mans soul that thou madest after thine owne likenes But Lord God men maketh nowe great stonen houses full of glasen windowes and clepeth thilke thine houses and Churches And they setten in these houses Mawmets of stockes and stones and to fore them they knelen priuilich apert and maken their prayers and all this they sayen is thy woorship and a great herieng to thee A Lorde thou forbiddest sometime to make suche Mawmetes and who that had yworshipped such had be woorthy to be deeade Lorde in the Gospell thou sayst that true heriers of God ne herieth him not in that hil beside Samarie ne in Hierusalem neyther but true heriers of God herieth him in spirite and in trueth And Lord God what herying is it to bilden thee a church of dead stones and robben thy quicke Churches of their body liche lyueloode Lord God what heryeng is it to cloth mawmets of stockes and of stones in siluer and in golde and
flesh of Christ and his bloud Whereupon the veritye himself said vnto his Disciples This is sayth he my flesh which is geuen for the life of the world and to speake yet more maruellously this is none other flesh thē that which was borne of the virgin Mary suffered vpon the crosse and rose out of the sepulchre See how far this chapter differeth from the first And in the chapter which beginneth Ego Berengarius c. This is the confession which Berengarius himselfe cōfessed touching this Sacrament and his confession is of the church allowed I confesse sayth Berengarius that the bread and wine which is layd vpon the aultar after the consecration is not onely a Sacrament but also that it is the very body bloud of our Lord Iesus Christ And the same not onely sensually to be a Sacrament but also verely to be handled with the Priestes hands and to be broken and chewed with the teeth of faythfull men This confession doubtlesse is hereticall for why if the body of Christ be in the Sacrament as of the Church it is so determined it is there then Multiplicatiuè and so indiuisibiliter wherfore not sensualiter And if it be there indiuisibiliter that is in such sort as it cannot be deuided or separated then can it not be touched felt broken nor with the teeth of men chewed The writers of this time and age do affirme that if by the negligence of the Priest the Sacrament be so negligētly left that a Mouse or any other beast or vermine eate the same then they say that the Sacrament returneth agayne into the nature and substaūce of bread Wherby they must nedes confesse that a miracle is as wel wrought by the negligence of the Priest as first there was made by the consecration of the Priest in making the Sacrament For either by the eating of the Mouse the body of Christ is transubstantiated into the nature of bread which is a transubstantiatiō supernaturall Or els of nothing by creation is this bread produced And therfore either of these operations is miraculous to be maruelled at Now cōsidering the disagreing opinions of the Doctors and for the absurdities which follow I beleue with Paule that the bread which we break is the participation of the body of Christ and as Christ sayth that the bread is made the body of Christ for a memorial and remembraunce of him And in such sort as Christ willed the same to be his body in the same maner sort do I beleue it to be his body But whether women may make the body of Christ minister vnto the people or whether that Priests be deuided frō the lay people for their knowledge preeminence sanctity of life or els by externall signes onely Also whether the signe of consure and other externall signes of holines in Priestes be signes of Antichrist and his charecters or els introduced taught by our Lord Iesus Christ consequently it remayneth next to speake of vnto the faythfull sort according to the proces of the holy Scripture first of the three kindes of the Priestes I remember that I haue read the first of them to be Aaronicall legall temporall The second to be eternall and regall according to the order of Melchisedech The third to be a Christian. The first of these ceased at the comming of Christ for that as S. Paule to the Hebrues sayth The Priesthood of Aaron was trāslated to the Priesthood of the order of Melchisedech The legall sort of Priestes of Aaron were separate from the rest of the people by kinred office and inheritance By kinred for that the children of Aaron onely were Priestes By office for that it onely pertayned to them to offer sacrifice for the sinnes of the people and to instruct the people in the precepts and ceremonies of the law By inheritaunce because the Lord was their portiō of inheritaūce neither had they any other inheritaunce amongest theyr brethren but those thinges which were offered vnto the Lord as the first fruits parts of the sacrifices and vowes except places for their mansion houses for them and theirs as appeareth by the processe of Moyses law The Priesthood of Christ did much differre from this Priesthood as Paule doth witnes to the Hebrues chapter 1.8.9.10 First in kinred because that our Lord Sauiour Iesus Christ came of the stocke and tribe of Iuda of whiche tribe none had to do with the aultar and in which tribe nothing at all was spoken of the Priestes of Moses The second for that other were made Priestes without their othe taken but he by an othe by him which sayd The Lord swore and it shall not repent him Thou art a Priest for euer according to the order of Melchisedech Thirdly by durability for that many of thē were made Priests but during the terme of their liues but he for that he remaineth for euer hath an eternall Priesthood Wherfore he is able to saue vs for euer hauing by himself accesse vnto God which euer liueth to make intercession for vs. The law made also such men Priestes as had infirmities but Sermo that is the word which according to the law is the eternall sonne and perfect by an othe The Priesthood of Christ also did differ frō the Priesthood of Aaron and the law in the matter of the sacrifice in the place of sacrificing In the matter of the sacrifice because they did vse in theyr sacrifices straunge bodyes of the matter of their sacrifices and did shed straūge bloud for the expiation of sinnes But he offering himself vnto God his father for vs shed his owne bloud for the remission of our sinnes In the place of sacrificing because that they did offer theyr sacrifice in the tabernacle or temple But Christ suffering death without the gates of the City offered himselfe vpon the aultar of the crosse to God his father there shed his precious bloud In his supping chamber also hee blessed the bread and cōsecrated the same for his body the wine which was in the cup he also cōsecrated for his bloud deliuering the same to his Apostles to be done for a commemoration and remembraunce of his incarnation passion Neither did Iesus enter into the sāctuary made with mans hands which be examples figures of true things but entred into heauē it selfe that he might appeare before the maiesty of God for vs. Neither doth he offer himself oftētimes as the chief priest in the sanctuary did euery yeare with straunge bloud for then should he often times haue suffered from the beginning but now once for all in the latter end of the world to destroy sinne by his peace offering hath he entred And euen as it is decreed that mā once shal dye and then commeth the iudgement so Christ hath bene once offered to take away the sinnes of many The second time he shall appeare without sinne to them
citation sent by messenger by letters or edict not admitting proofe by witnesses and sentēce definitiue to be we do ordeine will and declare for the easier punishment of the offēders in the premisses and for the better reformation of the church deuided and hurt that all such as are diffamed openly knowne or vehemētly suspected in any of the cases aforesayd or in anye article of the catholicke fayth sounding contrary to good manners by authoritie of the ordinary of the place or other superior be cited personally to appeare cyther by letters publique messenger being sworne or by edicte openly set at that place where the sayd offender commonly remayneth or in hys parish Church if he hath any certayne dwelling house Otherwise in y● Cathedrall church of the place where he was borne and in the parish churche of the same place where he so preached and taught And afterwardes certificate beyng geuen that the citation was formally executed agaynst the party cited being absent and neglecting hys appearannce it shal be proceeded agaynst him fully and playnly without sound or shew of iudgement and without admitting proofe by witnesses and other canonicall probations And also after lawful informatiō had the sayd ordinary al delayes set apert shall signifie declare and punishe the sayd offender according to the quallitie of his offence and in forme aforesayd and further shall doe according to iustice the absence of the offender notwithstanding Geuen at Oxford ¶ Who would haue thought by these lawes and constitutions so substantially founded so circumspectly prouided so dilligently executed but that the name and memory of this persecuted sort should vtterly haue bene rooted vp neuer could haue stand And yet such be the works of th● lord passing all mēs admiratiō all this notwithstanding so far was it of that the number and courage of these good men was vanquished that rather they multiplied dayly encreased For so I finde in Registers recorded that these foresayd persons whome the king and the Catholique fathers did so greatly deteste for heretickes were in diuers countries of this realme dispersed and increased especially at London in Lincolnshire in Northfolk in Herefordshyre in Shreusbury in Callice and diuers other quarters mo with whom the Archb. of Caunterbury Thomas Arundell the same time had much ado as by hys own registers doth appeare Albeit some there were that dyd shrinke many did reuolt and renounce for daunger of the law Among whom was Iohn Puruey whiche recanted at Paules Crosse of whom more foloweth the Lord willing to be said in the yeare 1421. Also Iohn Edward priest of the dioces of Lincolne who reuoked in the greene yard at Norwich Richard Herbert and Emmot Willy of Lōdon also Iohn Becket who recanted at London Item Iohn Seynons of Lincolneshyre who was caused to reuoke at Caunterbury The articles of whom which commonly they did hold and which they were constrayned to abiure most specially were these as follow Their Articles First that the office of the holy Crosse ordayned by the whole Church celebrated doth contayne idolatry Item they sayd and affirmed that all they which doe reuerence and worship the signe of the crosse do commit idolatry and are reputed as Idolaters Item they sayd and affirmed that the true fleshe and bloud of our Lord Iesus Christ is not in the sacrament of the aulter after the words spoken by the priest truely pronounced Item they sayd and affirmed the sacrament of the aultar to be sacramentall bread not hauing life but onely instituted for a memoriall of Christes passion Item they sayd and affirmed that the body of Christe which is taken on the aulter is a figure of that body of christ as long as we see the bread and wyne Item they sayd and affirmed that the decree of the prelates and clergie in the prouince of Caunterbury in theyr last conuocation with the consent of the king and the nobles in the last Parliament agaynst him that was brent lately in the citty of London was not sufficient to chaunge the purpose of the sayd Iohn when the substance of materiall bread is euen as before in the sacrament of the aultar it was no change being made in the nature of bread * Item that any lay man may preach the Gospel in euery place and may teach it by his owne authoritie without the licence of his Ordinary Itē that it is sinne to geue any thing to the preaching friers to the Minorites to the Augustines to the Carmelites Item that we ought not to offer at the funerals of the dead Item that the confession of sins to the people is vnneedefull Item that euery good man though he be vnlearned is a priest Item that the infant though he dye vnbaptised shal be saued Item that neither the pope nor the prelate neither any ordinary can compell any man to sweare by anye creature of God or by the bible booke Item that as well the Bishop the simple man the priest and the lay man be of like authoritie as lōg as they liue well Item that no man is bound to geue bodily reuerence to any prelate ¶ William Thorpe THus much briefly being signified by the way touching these which haue bene forced in time of this king to open abiuration Next commeth to our handes the worthy history of maister William Thorpe a warriour valiaunt vnder the triumphant banner of Christ with the processe of his examinations before the foresayd Thomas Arundell Archbishop of Caunterb written by the sayd Thorpe and storyed by his owne pen at the request of hys frendes as by hys own words in the processe here of may appeare In whole examination whiche seemeth first to begin an 1407. thou shalt haue good reader both to learne and to merueile To learne in that thou shalt beare truth discoursed and discussed with the contrary reasons of the aduersary dissolued To marueile for that thou shalt beholde here in this man the merueilous force and strength of the Lordes might spirite and grace working and fighting in his souldiors also speaking in theyr mouthes according to the word of hys promise Luke xxi To the rest of the story we haue neither added nor diminished but as we haue receiued it copied out corrected by maister Williā Tindall who had his own handwriting so we haue here sent it and set it out abroad Althoughe for the more credite of the matter I rather wished it in his own naturall speach wherein it was first written Notwithstanding to put away all doubt and scrouple herein this I thought before to premonishe and testifie to the Reader touching the certaintie hereof that they be yet aliue whiche haue seene the selfe same copy in his own old English resembling y● true antiquitie both of the speach and of the time The name of whom as for recorde of the same to auouche is M. Whithead who as he hath seene the true ancient copy in the hādes of George Constantine so hath he
speedely gathered into the ●arne whiche onely remayneth behinde to come Now if we ascribe such reputation to Godly preachers and worthely which diligently preache the Gospell of Christ when they liue notwithstanding by the benefite of tyme without all feare of persecution howe muche more reasonable cause haue we to prayse and extoll such men as stoutly spend theyr lyues for the defence of the same All these premisses duely of our partes considered and marked seeing we haue found so famous Martyrs in this our age let vs not fayle then in publishing and setting forth their doings lest in that poynt we seeme more vnkinde to them then the writers of the primitiue Church were vnto theirs And though we repute not theyr ashes chaynes and swerdes in the stede of reliques yet let vs yeld thus much vnto theyr commemoration to glory the Lord in hys Saintes and imitate theyr death as much as we may with like constancy or theyr liues at the least with like innocency They offered theyr bodies willing to the rough handling of the tormentors And is it so great a matter then for our part to mortifie our flesh with all the members thereof They neglected not onely the riches and glory of the world for the loue of Christ but also their liues and shal we then keepe so great a styrre one agaynst an other for the transitory trifles of this world They continued in patient suffering when they had most wrong done vnto them and when theyr very heartes bloud gushed out of theyr bodyes and yet will not wee forgeue our poore brother be the iniury neuer so small but are ready for euery trifling offence to seeke hys destruction and cut his throat They wishing well to all men did of theyr own accord forgeue theyr persecutors therefore ought we which are now the posteritie and Children of Martyrs not to degenerate from theyr former steps but being admonished by their examples if we cannot expresse theyr charitie toward all men yet at lest to imitate the same to our power and strength Let vs geue no cause of offence to any And if any be geuen to vs let vs ouercome it with patience forgeuing and not reuenging the same And let vs not onely keepe our handes from shedding of bloud but our tongues also from hurting the same of others Besides let vs not shrinke if case so require martyrdome or losse of lyfe according to their example to yeld vp the same in the defence of the Lordes flocke Whiche thing if men would do much lesse contention and busines woulde be in the world ●hen now is And thus much touching the vtilitie and fruit to be taken of this history To all the professed frendes and followers of the Popes proceedinges foure Questions propounded TO you all and singuler which professe the doctrine and Rel●gion of the Pope your holy Father and of your mother Church of Rome pretending the name of Catholickes commōly termed Papistes wheresoeuer abiding in the Realme of England these foure Questions or Problemes hereunder folowing I would moue desiring you all either to muse vpon thē or to answere thē at your leisure * The first Question FIrst forsomuch as Mount Sion which God calleth by the Prophet Iesai the hill of his holines beareth in the scripture an vndoubted type of the spiritual church of Christ for so much as the sayd Iesai. ca. 11. 65. prophesying of the sayd Mount Sion sayth in these wordes Non nocebunt neque affligent in omni monte sancto meo dicit Dominus c. 1. They shal not kill nor hurt in all my holy hill sayth the Lord. c. And agayne in the same chap. thus we read Habitabit Lupus cum agno Pardus cū haedo accubabit Vitulus Leo ouis vna commorabuntur puellus paruulus ducet eos c. i. The wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe the Leopard with the Kid the Calfe the Lion the sheepe shall feed together a yong child shall rule thē The Cow also the Beare shall abide together with theyr yong ones the Lion shall eat chaffe fodder like the Oxe c. Upon these premises now foloweth my question how the church of Rome can be answerable to this hill of Siō seing in the sayd church of Rome is and hath bene now so many yeares such killing and slaying such cruelty and tyranny shewed such burning spoyling of christen bloud such malice mischiefe wrought as in reading these historyes may to all the world appeare To this if they aunswere expound these wordes of the Prophet as perteining to the church triumphant therevnto I reply agayne that by the wordes in the same place in the same sentence expressed that sence cannot stand for as much as the Prophet in the very same place where he prophesieth of this peaceable dwelling in Gods holy mountayne without hurting or killing meaneth plainly of the earth sheweth also the cause of that godly peace Because sayth he the earth is replenished with knowledge science of the Lord. c. ibid. And furthermore the Prophet speaking of the same day when this shal be addeth saying In that day the root of Iesse shall stand for a signe to the people for the Gentils to be conuerted and to seeke vnto him c. Which day in no wise can be applyed to the church in heauen triumphant but only here militant in earth Touching which place of Iesai further here is to be noted by the way that by this peaceable Moūt Sion which comprehendeth both the states as well ecclesiasticall as tēporall is not restrayned the publicke penalty of good lawes needfull to be executed vpon publicke malefactors but here is restrayned the fiercenes reuenge cruelty violence of mens affections To which affectiōs men being commonly subiect by nature through grace working of the gospel are altered reformed chaūged to another disposition frō stoutnes to softnes frō violence to sufferance from fiercenes to forbearing frō pride to humility frō cruelty to compassion from wilynes to simplicity frō solemne singularity to humanity and meekenes Which vertues if they had bene in the church of Rome according to the rule of S. Paul which willeth men that be stronger to beare with the infirmities of the weaker and that in the spirit of meeknes c. Rom. 15. Gal. 6. I should not haue needed now at this time to write such a long history as this of the suffering of so many Martyrs ¶ The second Question MY second question is this to demaūd of you catholicke professors of the popes sect which so deadly maligne and persecute the protestants professing the gospell of Christ what iust or reasonable cause haue you to allege for this your extreme hatred ye bear vnto the y● neither you your selues can abide to liue with them nor yet will suffer the other to liue amongest you If they were Iewes
thus was their false periurie punished Narcissus after long absence returning home agayne was by this meanes both cleared of the facte and receiued into his bishoprike agayne To whom as is said for impotencie of his age Alexander was ioined with him in execution of the function Euseb. Hist. Eccles. Lib. 6. cap. 10. Of this Alexander is recorded in the sayd Ecclesiasticall history that after his agonies and constancie of his confessiō shewed in the persecution of Seuerus he was admonished by a vision in the night season to make his iourney vp to Hierusalem Palestina for that place remained free from this persecution to see there the congregation to pray Thus he taking his iourney and drawing nere to the city a vision with playne wordes was geuen to certaine chiefe heads of Hierusalem to go out of the gate of the city there to receiue the Bishop appointed to them of God And so was Alexander met and receiued and ioyned partner with aged Narcissus as is before expressed in the Citie of Hierusalem where he continued bishop aboue 40. yeares vntill the persecution of Decius and there crected a famous Libraric where Eusebius had his chiefest helpe in writing his Ecclesiasticall history He wrote also diuers Epistles to diuers churches and licensed Origene openly to teach in his Church At length beyng very aged was brought frō Ierusalem to Cesaria before the Iudge vnder Decius where after his constant confession the second tyme he was committed to prison and there died Besides these that suffred in this persecution of Seuerus recited of Eusebius Vincentius also Lib. 11. cap. 6. Ex Martyrol speaketh of one Andoclus whom Polycarpus before had sent into Fraunce which Andoclus because he spread there the doctrine of Christ was apprehended of Seuerus and first beaten with staues and battes after was beheaded To these aboue named may also be added Asclepiades who although was not put to death in this persecution of Seuerus yet constantly he did abide the trial of his confessiō suffered much for the same as Alexander did before mentioned Wherefore afterward he was ordained bishop of Antioch where he continued the space of vij yeares of whom Alexander writeth to the Church of Antioche out of prison much reioysing and geuing thankes to God to heare that he was their Bishop About the same tyme during the raigne of Seuerus died Irenaeus Henr. de Erfordia Ado and other Martyr writers do hold that he was martyred with a great multitude of other moe for the confession and doctrine of Christ about the fourth or fift yeare of Seuerus This Irenaeus as he was a great writer so was he greatly commended of Tertullian for his learning whom he calleth omnium doctrinarum curiosissimum exploratorem a great searcher of all kynde of learning He was first scholer and hearer of Polycarpus frō thence either was sent or came to Fraunce and there by Photinus and the rest of the Martyrs was instituted into the ministery commended by their letter vnto Eleutherius as is before premonished At length after the Martyrdom of Photinus he was appointed bishop of Lions where he cōtinued about the space of 23. yeres In the tyme of this Irenaeus the state of the Church was much troubled not only for the outward persecution of the foraine enemy but also for diuers sectes and errours then stirring against which he diligently laboured and wrote much although but few of his bookes be now remayning The nature of this man well agreeyng with his name was such that he euer loued peace and sought to set agreement when any controuersie role in the Church And therfore when the question of keeping the Easter day was renued to the Church bebetwene Victor bishop of Rome and the churches of Asia and when Victor would haue excommunicated them as schisinatikes for disagreeyng from him therein Irenaeus with other brethren of the French Church sory to see such a contention among brethren for such a trifle conuented themselues together in a common Councell and directing their letter with their common consent subscribed sent vnto Victor intreating him to stay his purpose not to proceed in excommunicating his brethren for that matter Although they themselues agreed with him in obseruing the Sonday Easter as he did yet with great reasons and arguments exhorted him not to deale so rigorously with his other brethren following the ancient custome of their coūtrey maner in that behalf And beside this he wrote diuers other letters abroad concerning the same contentiō declaring the excommunication of Victor to be of no force Not long after Irenaeus followed also Tertullian about the tyme of this Seuerus and Antoninus Carcalla his sonne a man both in Greeke and Latin wel expert hauing great gifts in disputing and in writing eloquent as his bookes declare as the commendation of al learned men doth testifie no lesse To whom Vincentius Lirinensis geueth such prayse that he calleth him the floure of all Latine writers and of the eloquence of his stile so he writeth that with the force of his reasons he saith whom he could not persuade them he cōpelled to consent vnto him How many words so many sentences and how many sentences so many victories he had Such men of doing and writing God raiseth vp from tyme to tyme as pillers and stayes for his poore Church as he did this Tertullian in these dangerous dayes of persecution For whē the christians were vexed with wrongs falsly accused of the Gentils Tertullian taking their cause in hand defendeth them against the persecutors against their slaunderous accusations First that they neuer minded any styre or rebellion either against the Empire or Emperors of Rome forsomuch as the vse of Christians was to pray for the state of their Emperours and gouernours And where as they were accused falsly to bee enemies to all mankind how could that be saith Tertullian to Scapula seyng the proper office of the Christians is by their profession to pray for all men to loue their enemies neuer requiting euil for euil when as all other do loue but onely their friends and scarcely them As touching the horrible slaunder of murdering infants how can that be true in the Christians saith he whose order is to abstayne from all bloud strangled in so much that it is not lawful for thē to touch the bloud of any beast at their tables when they feede From filthy copulation no sort more free then they which are and euer hath ben the greatest obseruers of chastitie of whom such as may liue in perpetuall Uirginitie all their life such as cannot contract matrimony for auoyding all whoredom and fornication Neither can it be proued of the christians to worship the sunne which false surmise Tertulliā declareth to rise hereof for that the maner of the Christians was to pray toward the East Much lesse was there any of them so mad as to worship an Asses head
among vs of this age of the Church but also among the Auncient fathers Whereof S. Austen speaking of his commendation sayth Ego inquit literas Cypriani non vt canonicas habeo sed eas ex canonisis considero quod in eis deuinarum Scripturarum autoritati congruit cum laude eius accipio quod autem non congruit cum pace eius respuo c. By which words it may appeare that Austen although he did not repute y● bookes and writings of Cyprian to be equiualent with the holy Scripture yet notwithstanding next after the scriptures he had the same in great admiration Vincentius and Laziardus Celestinus recyting the names of dyuers bookes bearyng the tytle of Cyprian moe perchaunce then be truly his do collect out of them a certaine extract of his most pithy sentences al which here to repeat were to tedious To giue a tast of the speciall I thought it not impertinent As where he speaking of the treasures of a rich man exhorteth saying Ne dormiat in thesauris tuis quod pauperi prodesse potest● i. Let it not sleepe in thy treasures that may profite the poore Duo nunquam veterascunt in homine cor semper nouas cogitationes machinando lingua cordis vanas conceptiones proferendo i. Two things neuer waxe old in man the hart euer in imagining new cogitations the toung euer in vttering the vaine conceptions of the hart Quod aliquando de necessitate amittendum est sponte prodiuina remuneratione distribuendum est .i. That which a man must needes forgo of necessitie wisedome it is a man to distribute so that God may euerlastingly reward him Disciplina est morum praesentium ordinata correctio malorum praeteritorum regularis obseruatio i. Discipline is an ordinate amendment of maners present and a regular obseruation of euils past Integritas ibi nulla esse potest vbi qui improbos damnent desunt soli qui damnentur occurrunt There can be no integrity wheras they which should condemne the wicked are euer wanting and they only which are to be condemned are euer present Auari ad hoc tantum possident quae habent vt ne alteri possidere liceat A couetous man onely possesseth his goodes for this because an other should not possesse them Sericum purpurum indutae Christum induere non possunt Wemen that aduaunce themselues in putting on silks and purple cannot lightly put on Christ. Foeminae crines suos inficiunt malo praesagio Capillos enim sibi flammeos auspicari non metuunt They which colour their lockes with red and yealow beginne betime to prognosticate of that colour theyr heades shall be in hell Qui se pingunt in hoc seculo aliter quam creauit Deus metuant ne cum resurrectionis venerit dies artifex creaturam suam non recognoscat They which loue to paynt themselues in this world otherwise then God hath created thē let them feare least when the day commeth of resurrection the creator will not know them Qui pauperi eleemosinam dat Deo suauitatis odorem sacrificat He that gyueth an almes to the poore sacrificeth to God an odour of swete smell Contemnenda est omnis iniuria praesentium molorum fiducia futurorum bonorum All iniurie of euils presēt to be neglected for the good hope of good thinges to come Nihil prodest verbis proferre virtutem factis destruere To set out vertue in wordes and to destroy the same in factes is nothing worth Quo plures domi sint tibi liberi hoc plus tibi non recondendum sed erogandum est quia multorum iam delicta redimenda sunt multorum purgandae conscientiae The mo children and greater houshoulde thou hast at home the more cause thou hast not to horde vp but to disperse abroode for that many sinnes are to be redeemed many consciences are to be purged ¶ Moreouer least the Papists here should take an occasion by this text grounded vpon the text of Tobi cap. 4. Almose saith he deliuereth from al sinne and death to build vp the workes of satisfactiō the said Cyprian Lib. 4. Epist 2. more plainely expoundeth both himselfe and that place of Scripture writing in these wordes Quia scriptum est Eleemosina ab omni peccato morte liberat Yob 4. non vtique ab ea morte quam semel Christi sanguis extinxit a qua nos salutaris Baptismi tedemptoris nostri gratia liberauit sed ab illa quae per delicta postmodum serpit c. That is Almose doth deliuer from all sinne and from death Yob 4. not from that saith Cyprian which the bloude of Christ hath once extincted and from which the wholsome grace of our Baptisme and of our redeemer hath deliuered vs but frō that death which afterward creepeth in by sinne c. Cyprian Lib. 4. Epist. 2. by which words it is apparant that Cyprian meaneth this deliueraunce which commeth by almose gyuing from death and sinne not to be expounded nor to be taken for death euerlasting from which only the bloude of Christ doth saue vs but for temporall or transitory punishment which is wont to be inflicted in this body of sin For so it is nothing repugnaunt but that temporall vertues may haue their temporall rewards in this life likwise sinnes committed may haue temporal punishments both of vs and in our families our eternal saluation standing euermore firme in Christ yet notwithstanding The foresaide Vincentius moreouer speaking of an other booke of Cyprian although the said booke be not numbred in the Catalogue of his workes maketh mention of xij abuses or absurdities in the life of man which in order be these 1. Sapiens sine operibus A wise man without good workes 2. Senex sine religione An old man without religion 3. Adolescens sine obedientia A young man without obedience 4. Diues sine eleemosina A rich man without almose 5. Foemina sine pudicitia A woman shameles 6. Dominus sine virtute A guide without vertue 7. Christianus contentiosus A Christian man contentious 8. Pauper superbus A poore man proude 9. Rex iniquus A king vnrighteous 10. Episcopus negligens A byshop negligent 11. Plebs sine disciplina People without discipline 12. Populus sine lege Subiectes without law As I haue hetherto set forth the commendation of Cyprian this blessed Martyr so must we nowe take heede againe that we do not here incurre the old common daunger whiche the Papystes are commonlye accustomed to runne into whose fault is alwayes almost to be immoderate and excessiue in their procedings making to much almost of euery thing So in speaking of the holye Sacraments they make more of them then doth the nature of Sacraments require not vsing them but abusing thē not referring or applying them but adoring them not taking thē in their kind for thinges godly as they are but taking thē for God himselfe turning religion into
Wherfore my counsaile and reason is to geue place to the kings purpose for a tyme least by ouer hastie proceeding we exceede so farre that both it may redounde to our shame also cannot rid our selues out again when we would Much to the same end spake Robert the bishop of Lincoln after this maner Seing sayth he it is manifest that the lyfe and bloud of this man is sought one of these two must needes be chosen that eyther he must part with hys Archbishoprike or els with his lyfe Now what profite he shall take in this matter of his Bishoprike his life being lost I do not greatly see Next followed Bartlemew bishop of Exceter with his aduise who inclining his counsaile to the state of tyme confirmed their sayings before affirmyng how the dayes were euill and perillous And if they might so escape that violence of that raging tempest vnder the couer of bearing and relenting it were not to be refused But that he sayd could not be except straight seueritie should geue place to tractabilitie and so the instance and condition of tyme then present required no lesse especially seyng that persecution was not generall but personall and perticular thought it more holy and conuenient one head to run in some part of danger then the whole church of England to be subiect and exposed to inconuenience ineuitable The answer of Roger bishop of Worcester was deuided in a double suspence neither affirming the one nor denying the other whose saying was this that he would geue no answer on neither part For if I saith he shal say that the pastorall function cure of soules ought to be relinquished at the kings will or threatning then my mouth shall speake against my conscience to the condemnation of myne owne head And if I shal geue againe contrary coūsail to resist the kings sentence here be they that will heare it and report it to his grace and so I shall be in danger to be thrust out of the sinagoge and for my part to be accōpted amōgst the publike rebels with them to be condemned wherfore neither do I say this nor counsaile that And this was the consultation of the Bishops in that place assembled together by the kings commaundement Against these voyces censures of the bishops Becket the Archbishop replyeth agayne expostulatyng and checking them with rebukefull wordes I perceiue sayth ' he and vnderstand ye go about to maintaine and cherish but your owne cowardnes vnder the colorable shadow of suffrāce and vnder pretence of dissembling softnes to choke the liberty of christes church Who hath thus bewitched you O vnsatiable bishops What meane ye Why do ye so vnder the impudent title of forbearing beare a double heart and cloke your manifest iniquitie What call ye this bearing w e tyme the detriment of the Church of Christ Let termes serue the matter why peruert you the matter that is good with vocables termes vntrue For that ye say we must beare with the malice of tyme I graunt with you but yet we must not heape sinne to sinne Is not God able to help the state and condition of his church but with the sinnefull dissimulatiō of the teachers of the church Certes God is disposed to tempt you And tell me I pray you whether should the gouernors of the church put themselues to dāgers for the church in time of tranquillitie or in tyme of distresse Ye will be ashamed to deny the contrary but in distresse And now then the church lying in so great distresse and vexation why should not the good pastor put himselfe into perill therfore For neither do I thinke it a greater act or merite for the auncient bishops of the olde tyme to lay the foundation of the church then with their bloud then now for vs to shed our bloud for the liberties of the same And to tel you plain I thinke it not safe for you to swarue from an example which you haue receiued of your holy elders After these things were spoken they sate all in silence a certayne space beyng locked in together At length to find a shift to cause the dore to be opened I will sayth the Archbishop speake with two Earles which are about the kyng and named them whome they were Which beyng called opened the dore and came in with hast thinking to heare some thyng which should appease the kyngs mynd To whom the Archbishop spake in this maner As touching and concerning the matters betwene the king vs we haue here conferred together And for as much as we haue them not present with vs now which know more in the matter then we do whose aduise we would be glad also to followe therefore we craue so much respite as to the next day followyng and then to geue vp our answer vnto the king With this message two bishops were sent to the kyng which was the bishop of London and the bishop of Rochester London to helpe the matter and to set quietnesse as I take it addyng somethyng more to the message sayd to the king that the Archb. craued a litle delay of tyme to prepare such writings and instruments wherin he should set forth and declare his mynd in accomplishing the kings desire c. Wherfore two barons were sent to hym from the king to graunt him that respite or stay so that he would ratifie that which the messengers had signified to the kyng To the which the Archb. aunswereth that he sent no such message as was intimate in his name but only that the next day he would come and geue aunswer to the king in that which he had to say And so the conuocation of the bishops was dissolued and dismissed home so that the most part of them that came with the Archb. and accompanied hym before for feare of the kings displeasure seuered thēselues from him The Archb. thus forsaken and destitute as hys story sayth sent about for the poore the lame and the halt to come in and furnish his house saying that by them he might sooner obtaine his victory than by the other which had so slipt from him On the next day following because it was sonday nothing was done But the nyght before beyng taken with a disease called passio iliaca the colicke all that day he kept his bed and was not able as he sayd to ryse Euery man supposing this to be but a fayned sickenes as it semed no lesse certayne of the chiefe Nobles were sent to try the matter and to cite hym to the Court namely Rob. erle of Leicester and Reginald Erle of Deuonshire To whom the Archb. answered that as that day he was so diseased that he could not come yea though he were brought in an horse litter So that day passed ouer The morow after certayne that were about hym fearyng no lesse but that some danger would happen to him gaue him counsaile in the morning to haue a masse in the
Lord and to reforme the same and not only to reforme and amend his fault but also to satisfy it to the vttermost if the law shall so require him Wherfore seing he is so willing to recōpēce satisfy the iudgemēt of the church in al things appertaining to the church refusing no order that shal be takē but in al thīgs submitting his neck to the yoke of Christ with what right by what canon or reason can you interdict him or vse excommunication against him It is a thing laudable a vertue of great cōmendation in wise men wisely to goe with iudgement and reason and not to be caried with puffes of hasty violence Whereupon this is the onely and common petition of vs all that your fatherly care will diligently prouide for your flocke and sheepe committed to you so that they miscary not or runne to any ruine through any inconsiderate or to much heady counsell in you but rather through your softnes and sufferance they may obtayne life peace and security It doth moue vs all that we heare of late to be done by you agaynst the Byshop of Salisbury the Deane of the same church prosperously as some men suppose against whom you haue geuen out the sentence of excommunication and condemnation before any question of their crime was following therein as seemeth more the heat of hastynesse then the path of righteousnesse This is a new order of iudgement vnheard of yet to this day in our lawes and canons first to condemne a man and then to enquire after of the fact committed Which order least ye should hereafter attempt to exercise in like maner agaynst our soueraigne and king or agaynst vs and our Churches and Parishes committed to vs to the detriment of the Pope and the holy church of Rome and to the no little confusion of vs all therefore we lay here agaynst you for our selues the remedy of appellation And as before openly in the publicke face of the Church with liuely voyce we appealed to the Pope for feare of certayne perils that might haue happened So now agayn in writing we appeale to the same assigning the terme of our appellation the day of the Lordes Ascention Most humbly and reuerently beseching your goodnesse that you taking a better way with you in this matter will let your cause fall sparing herein both the labours and charges as well of your selfe as ours also And thus we wish you right well to fare reuerend in the Lord. The rescript or aunswere agayne of Thomas Becket to all his suffraganes not obeying but confuting their counsayle sent FRaternitatis Gestra scriptum quod tamen prudentia Gestra cōmuni consilio non facilè credimus emanasse nuper ex insperat● suscepimus c. Your brotherly letters sent albeit not by the whole assent of your wisedomes written as I suppose of late I receiued vpon a sodayne the contentes whereof seeme to contayne more sharpenesse then solace And would to God they proceeded more of sincere zeale of godliness or affection of charity then of disobedience or froward wilfulnesse For charity seketh not the thinges that be his owne but which appertayne to Iesus Christ. It had bene your duety if there be truth in the Gospel as most vndoubtedly there is and if you would faythfully haue accomplished his busines whose person you represent rather to haue feared him which can cast both body and soule to hell then him whose power extendeth no further then to the body rather to haue obeyed God then man rather your Father then your Maister or Lord after the example of him who was to his Father obedient vnto the death Which dyed for vs leauing vs example to follow hys steps Let vs dye therefore with him and lay downe our liues for the deliueraunce of his Church out of the yoke of bondage and tribulation of the oppressor which Church he hath founded and whose libertye he hath procured with his owne proper bloud Least if we shall do otherwise it may happely fall vpon vs whiche is written in the Gospell Who so loueth his owne life more then me is not worthy of me This ye ought to know that if it be right which your captayne commaundeth your duety requireth to obey his will if not ye ought then rather to obey God then men One thing I will say if I may be so bolde to tell it vnto you I haue now suffered and abstayned a long space wayting if the Lord had geuen you to take a better hart vnto you which haue turned away cowardly your backes in the day of battayle or if any of you would haue returned againe to stand like a wall for the house of Israel at least if he had but shewed himselfe in the field making but the countenaunce of a warrier agaynst them which cease not dayly to infest the Lambe of God I wayted and none came I suffered and none rose vp I held my peace none would speake I dissembled and none would stand with me in like semblance Wherefore seing I see no better towardnesse in you thys remayneth onely to enter action of complaynt agaynst you and to cry agaynst mine enemies Rise vp O Lord and iudge my cause reuenge the bloud of the church which is wasted and oppressed The pride of them which hate his libertye riseth vp euer neyther is there any that doth good no not one Woulde God brethren beloued there were in you any minde or affection to defend the libertye of the Churche for she is builded vpon a sure rocke that although she be shaken yet she can not be ouerthrowne And why then seek ye to confoūd me Nay rather your selues in me then me in you A man which hath taken vpon me all the peril haue sustained all the rebukes haue sustained all the iniuries haue suffered also for you all to the very banishment And so it was expedient one to suffer for that Church that thereby it might be released out of seruitude These thinges discusse you simply with your selues and weigh the matter Attend I say dilligently in your mindes for your partes that God for his part remouing from your eies all maiesty of rule and impery as he is no accepter of persons may take from your hartes the veile that ye may vnderstand and see what ye haue done what ye entend to do and what ye ought to do Tell me which of you all can say I haue taken from him since the time of my promotion either Oxe or Asse if I haue defrauded him of any peny If I haue misiudged the cause of any man wrōgfully Or if by the detrimēt of any person I haue sought my owne gaine let him complayn I will restore him fourefolde And if I haue not offēded you what then is the cause that ye thus leaue and forsake me in the cause of God Why bend ye so your selues agaynst me in such a cause that there is none more speciall belonging to the
able to helpe vs. In saying or singing the houres and Mattens of the day the time to be but lost A man ought to cease from his labour no day but onely vpon the Sonday The feastes and festiuals of saintes ought to be reiceted Item such fastes as be coacted and inioyned by the Church haue no merite in them These assertions of the Ualdenses being thus articled out by En●as Siluius I thought to geue them abroad in English as they are in Latine to the intent that as they are the lesse to be doubted being set out of a popes pen so we may the better know both them hereby what they were and also vnderstand how this doctrine now preached and taught in the Church is no new doctrine which here we see both taught and persecuted almost 400 yeares agoe And as I haue spoken hetherto sufficiently concerning theyr doctrine So now we will briefly somewhat touch of the order of theyr life and conuersation as we finde it registred in a certayne olde written booke of Inquisition ¶ Ex Inquisitorio quodam libello MOdus autem Valdensium talis est c. The whole proces commeth to this effect in English The maner of the Ualdenses is this They kneeling vpon their knees leaning to some banke or stay doe continue in their prayers with silence so long as a mā may say 30. or 40. times Pater noster And this they doe euery day with great reuerence being amongest thēselues such as be of their owne religion no straungers with thē both before dinner after likewise before supper and after also what time they go to bed and in the morning when they rise at certain other times also as well in the day as in the night Itē they vse no other prayer but the prayer of the Lord that without any Aue Maria and the Creed which they affirme not to be put in for any prayer by Christ but only by y● church of Rome Albeit they haue and vse y● seuē articles of fayth cōcerning the diuinity and seuen articles concerning the humanity and the x. commaundements and seuen workes of mercy which they haue compiled together in a cōpendious book glorying much in the same therby offer themselues ready to answere any man for theyr fayth Before they go to meate they haue this grace Benedicite Korieeleyson Christe eleyson Kyrieeleyson Pater noster Which being sayd then the elder amongest them beginneth thus in their owne tongue God which blessed the fiue barely loaues and two fishes in the desert before his disciples blesse this table that is set vpon it or shal be set vpon it In the name of the father of the sonne and of the holy Ghost Amen And likewise agayne when they rise from meat the seniour geueth thankes saying the words of the Apocalips Blessing and worship and wisedome thankesgeuing honor vertue and strength to God alone for euer and euer Amen And addeth moreouer God reward them in their bosoms and be beneficiall to all them that be beneficial to vs and blesse vs. And the God which hath geuen vs corporall feeding graunt vs his spirituall life and God be with vs and we alwayes with h●m To which they answere agayn Amē And thus saying grace they hold their hands vpward looking vp to heauē Alter their meat and grace sayd they teach and exhort amongest themselues conferring together vpon their doctrine c. In their doctrine and teaching they were so diligent painefull that Reinerius a writer about their time an extreme enemy agaynst them in a long proces wherin he describeth their doctrine and teaching testifieth that he heard of one which did know the party that a certayne heretick sayth he onely to turne a certaine person away from our faith and to bring him to his in the night and in y● winter time swamme ouer the riuer called Ibis to come to him and to teach him moreouer so perfect they were then in the Scriptures that the sayd Reinerius sayth he did heare and see a man of the coūtry vnlettered which could recite ouer the whole booke of Iob word by word without booke with diuers other which had the whole new testament perfectly by hart And although some of them rather merely then vnskilfully expounded the wordes of 1. Ioan. Sui non receperunt eum Swine did not receiue him yet were they not so ignoraunt and voyd of learning nor yet so few in number but that they did mightely preuayle In somuch that Reinerius hath these wordes Non erat qui eos impedire auderet propter potentiam multitudinem fautorum suorum Inquisitioni examinationi saepe interfui Et computatae sunt 40. Ecclesiae quae haeresi infectae fuerunt●ac in yna parochia Cammach fueruut decem eorum scholae c. That is There was none durst stoppe them for the power and multitude of their fauourers I haue often bene at their inquisition examination And there were numbred 40. churches infected with their heresie insomuch that in one parish of cāmach were x open scholes of them c. Haec ille And the sayde Reinerius when hee hath sayd all he can in deprauing and impugning them yet is driuen to confesse this of them where he doth distinct their sect frō other sectes and hath these wordes Haec verò Leonistarum secta magnam habet speciem pietatis eò quòd coram hominibus iustè viuant benè omnia de Deo credant omnes articulos qui in symbolo continētur Solam Romanam Ecclesiam blasphemāt oderūt That is This sect of Leonistes hath a great shew of holynesse in that both they liue iustly before men and beleue all things well of God and holde all the articles conteined in the Creed Onely they blaspheme y● Romish church and hate it c. Now to touch somewhat their persecutiōs After they were driuen out of Lions they were scattered into diuers sundry places the prouidence of God so disposing that the sound of their doctrine might be heard abroad in the world Some as I sayd went to Bohemia Many did fli● into their prouinces of Fraunce Some into Lombardy other into other places c. But as the crosse commonly foloweth the verity sincere preaching of Gods word so neither could these be suffered to liue in rest There are yet to be seen the consultations of Lawiers Archbishops and byshops of Fraunce as Narbonensis A relatensis Aquēsis and Albanensis deuised amongst themselues and yet remayne in writing for the abolishing extirping of these Ualdenses written aboue 300. yeres agoe wherby it appeareth there was a great number in Fraunce Besides there was a whole councell kept in Theolouse about 355. yeares to fore and all agaynst these Ualdenses The which also were condemned in an other coūcell at Rome before that What great persecutions were raysed vp agaynst thē in Fraunce by these 4. Archbishops before
both of faythful chastity and high prudēce so tempering the matter that both she obtayned to her husband the kingdome and retayned to her selfe agayne her husband whom she so faythfully loued an 1186. Ex Historia manu scripta cui initium Rex Pictorum ex Bibliotheca Cariensi mutuata As I haue hetherto described the publick acts of king Henry so now I meane to touch something of his priuat conditions He was of meane stature eloquent and learned manly and bolde in chiualry Fearefull of the mutability and chaunce of warre more lamenting the death of his souldiars dead thē louing them aliue none more curteous liberall for the obtayning of his purpose in peace and tranquility none more roughter stubberne agaynst the stubberne sometimes mercifull to those whom he had vanquished straight to his householde seruauntes but liberall to straūgers publickly of publick thinges liberall sparing of his owne whom once he tooke a displeasure agaynst hardly or neuer would he receiue agayne to fauor somewhat lauash of his tongue a willing breaker of hys promise a louer of his ease but an oppressor of his nobility a seuere reuenger and furtherer of iustice variable of word and crafty in his talke an open adulterer a nourisher of discord amongst his children Moreouer the Papistes bearing him for Thomas Beckets quarell such like as may be gathered no good will terme him to be an aduersary of the sayth the maule and beetle of the church Also in the Chronicle intituled Scala mundi I finde of him that he followeth the steppes maners and conditiōs of Henry the first his graūdfather in euery poynt He preserued firme peace executed straight iustice through all his dominions He loued marueilous well his forrest agayne those that were transgressors either to his crown or person he most seuerely punished Moreouer in a certayne history intituled De regibus Angliae I finde that this king was sondry times admonished to reforme and amēd his life And first by one that was an olde man at the castle of Card●f in Wales at that time of the yeare called Dominica in albis the eight day after Easter Where also after that he had heard masse and was going to take his horse there stood a certayne man by him somewhat yelowish his heare being rounded leaue and illfauoured hauing on a white coat and being barefoote looked vpon the king and spake in this wise good olde king That done thus he proceedeth The king saluteth you and his blessed mother Iohn Baptist Peter straightly charging you that vpon the Sundayes throughout all your dominions there be no buying selling or other seruile businesse those onely except which appertayne to the preparation of meat and drinke which thing if thou shalt obserue whatsoeuer thou takest in hād thou shalt happely finish and bring to passe Then spake the king in French to the knight that held his horse by the bridle Aske of this chourle whether he dreamed this or not And in the meane while that the knight should haue interpreted the kinges wordes and message he spake before and said Whether this be a dreame or not mark wel what day this is for vnlesse that thou do these things and amend thy life such newes shalt thou heare within these 12. monethes that will make thee lament and mourne till thy dying day And when these wordes were spoken the man vanished out of his sight And within one yeare next after Henry Bawfride and Richard his sonnes for sooke him their father and took part with the French king The king of Scottes the Earle of Chester and Earle of Leciter made an insurrection agaynst the king Many other premonitions were geuen also to the king but all these did he little esteme The second which did admonish him was a certayne Irish man geuing him certayne secret signes And thirdly a certayne knight of Fyndesey named Phillip de Easterby sayling with him ouer into Fraunce declared vnto the king in Normandy seuen articles which he should amend Which thing if he wold do he should raigne seuē yeares most honorably and should take the holy crosse from his enemies or els he in the fourth yeare should dye in great ignominye The 3. first thinges were these which he at his coronation sware to obserue that is to defend the Church to mayntayne good lawes and to condemne no man to death without iudgement The fourth was for the restoring of inheritaūce wrongfully takē The fift was in doing iustice without reward The sixt was of ministers officers wages and stipēdes The seuenth was of expelling the Iewes leauing them some money to depart withal But the king not amēding his life there rose vp agaynst him 3. strong enemies that is to say his three sonnes with the Frenchking But after that the king forsooth had gone a pilgrimage to the Martys tombe barfoote William the king of Scots the Earles of Chester and Lecester were taken at Alnewick In the 35. yeare of his raigne being in the Castle of Chiuen in Normandy he dyed at whose death those that were presēt were so greedy of the spoyle that they left the body of the king naked and not so much could be foūd as a cloth to couer it till that a Page comming in and seing the king so ignominiously to lye threw his cloke vpō his nether partes wherein sayth the author was verified the surname which from his youth he bare being called Hēry court Mantill ¶ King Richard IN this yeare of the Lord aboue recited which was 1189. King Richard the eldest sonne of Henry 2. succeeding his Father entred his crowne at which time Pope Clement sate at Rome succeeding after Gregory which dyed a litle before with sorrow for the losse of the holy crosse During the time of whose coronatiō it befell that not withstanding the king the day before his coronation and by publicke edict commaunded both the Iewes and their wiues not to presume either to enter the church or els his pallace during the solemnization of his coronation amōgest his nobles and Barons yet whilest the king was at dinner the chiefetayne of the Iewes with diuers other of his Iewish affinity and supersticious sect agaynst the kings prohibition together with other prease entred the court gates Wherat a christian man being offēded stroke one of them with his hand or fist bad him stand further from the court gate as the king had geuen in commaundement whose example others also following being displeased agaynst the Iewes offered them the like contuinely Other also supposing that the king had so cōmaunded in deed as vsing the authority of the king fel vpō all the Iewes that stood by without the court gate And first they bet them with theyr fistes but afterward they tooke vp stones and such other thinges as they could get and threw at them and bet them therewith And thus driuing them from the court gates some of them they wounded
them at some straight or other aduauntage were by the Prince premonished thereof and returning agayn vpon them gaue a charge and slew many of them and the rest they put to flight After this about Midsomer when the Prince had vnderstāding that the Saracens began to gather at Cakhow which was 40. myles from Acra he marching thether set vpō them very early in the morning and slue of them more then a 1000. the rest he put to flight and tooke riche spoyles marching forward till they came to a Castle named Castrum Peregrinorum situate vpon the Sea cost and taried there that night the next day they returned toward Acra In the meane season the king of Ierusalem sent vnto the noble men of Cypres desiring them with speede that they would come and ayde the Christians but they would not come saying they would keepe their own land and go no further Then Prince Edward sent vnto them desiring that at his request they would come ioyne in ayd with him Who immediately thereupon came vnto him with great preparation and furniture for the warres saying that at hys commaundement they were bounde to do no lesse for that his predecessors were sometimes that gouernors of their lande that they ought alwaies to shewe their fidelitie to the kings of England Then the Christians being herew t animated made a third voiage or Rode and came as farre as the fort called Vincula S. Petri and to S. Georges and when they had slayne certayne there not finding any to make resistance agaynst them they retyred agayne from whence they came When thus the fame of prince Edward grew amongst hys enemies and that they began to stand in doubt of him they deuised amongest themselues howe by some pollicie they might circumuent him and betray him Whereupon the great Prince and Admirall of Ioppa sent vnto hym sayning himselfe vnder great deceit to become a Christian and that he would draw with hym a great number besides so that they might be honorably entertayned vsed of the Christians This talke pleased the Prince well and perswaded him to finish the thing he had so well begonne by writing agayne who also by the same messenger sent and wrote backe vnto him diuers tymes about the same matter whereby no mistrust shoulde spring This messenger sayth myne autor was one ex cautè nutritis one of the slony harted that neither feared God nor dreaded death The fift tyme when this messenger came and was of the Princes seruauntes searched according to the maner and custome what weapon and armour he had about him as also his purse that not so much as a knife could be founde about him he was had vp into the Princes chamber and after hys reuerence done he pulled out certayne letters which he deliuered to the Prince from his Lord as he had done others before This was about eight dayes after whitsontide vpon a Teusday somewhat before night at which time the Prince was laid vpon his bed bare headed in his Ierkin for the great heat and intemperature of the weather When the Prince had red the letters it appeared by thē that vpon the Saterday next following his Lord woulde be there ready to accomplishe all that he had written and promised The report of these newes by the prince to the standers by liked them well drawing some what backe to consult thereof amongest themselues In the meane tyme the messenger kneeling making his obersance to the Prince questioning further with him put his hand to the belt as though he would haue pulled out some secret letters sodenly he pulled out an inuenomed knife thinking to haue stroken hym into the belly therew t as he lay But y● Prince lifting vp his hand to defend the blow was striken a great woūd into that arm And being about to fetch an other stroke at him the prince agayn with his foote tooke hym suche a blow that he feld him to the ground with that the prince gat him by the hand and with such violence wrasted the knife from him that he hurt himself therwith on the forehead and immediately thrust the same into the belly of the messenger and striker and slue him The Princes seruauntes being in the next chamber not farre of hearing the bulkling came with great hast rūning in and finding the messenger lying dead in the floure one of them tooke vp a stoole and bet out his braynes wherat the Prince was wroth for that he stroke a dead man and one that was killed before The rumour hereof as it was straunge so it soone went throughout all the Court and from thence amongst the common people wherefore they were very heauy and greatly discouraged To him came also the Captayne of the Temple brought him a costly and precious drinke agaynst poyson least the venim of the knife shoulde penetrate the liuely bloud and in blaming wise sayde vnto hym Did I not shewe your grace before of the deceipt subtiltie of this people Notwithstanding sayth he let your grace take a good hart you shall not die of this wound my life for yours But straight wayes the surgions phisitiōs were sent for and the prince was dressed and within few dayes after the wound began to putrifie and the flesh to looke dead and blacke wherupon they that were about the prince began to mutter amongest thēselues and were very sad and heauy Which thinge he himselfe perceauing sayd vnto them why mutter you thus amongest yourselues What see you in me can I not be healed Tell me the truth be ye not afrayd Whereupon one said vnto him and like your grace you may be healed we mistrust it not but yet it will be very paynefull for you to suffer May suffering sayth he again restore health Yea sayth the other on payne of loosing my head Then sayd the Prince I commit my selfe to you doe with me what you thinke good Then said one of the Phisitions is there any of your Nobles in whome your grace reposeth speciall trust To whome the Prince aunswered yea namyng certayne of the Noble men that stoode about him Then sayd the Phisition to the two whome the Prince first named the Lord Edmund and the Lord Iohn Uoysie And doe you also faythfully loue your Lord and Prince Who aunswered both yea vndoubted Then sayth he take ye away this Gentlewoman and Lady meaning hys wife let her not see her Lord and husband till such a time I will you thereunto Whereupon they tooke her out of the princes presence crying out and wringing her hands Thē said they vnto her be ye contented good Lady Madame It is better that one woman should weepe a little while then that all the realme of England shoulde weepe a great season Then on the morow they cut out all the dead and inuenemed flesh out of the Princes arme and threw it from them and sayd vnto him how chereth your grace we promise
him agayn with great successe felicitie and long raigne In so much the he beyng yong as he was playing at Chesse with a certayne souldior of his sodainly hauing no occasion geuen rose vp and went his way who was not so soon voyded the place but incontinent fel down a mighty stone from the vawt aboue directly vpon that place where he sate able to haue quashed him in peeces if he had caried neuer so little more In the proseruation of whome as I see the present hand and mighty prouidence of the huing God so in the kinges order agayne I note a fault or error worthy of reprehension For that he receiuing such a liuely benefite at the hand of the liuing Lord going therefore on pilgrimage to walsingham gaue thanks not only to our Lady but rather to a rotten blacke Ibidem Of the gentle nature of this couragious prince sufficient proofe is geuen by this one example that what time he being in hys desport of hauking chaunced sharpoly to rebuke the negligence of one of his gentlemen for what fault I cannot tell about his hauke the gentleman being on the other side of the riuer hearing his manassing wordes was glad as he sayd that the riuer was between them with this answer the couragious bloud of this Prince being moued vppon present hear he leaped straight into the floud both a swift streame and of a dangerous deepnesse and no lesse hard in getting out Notwithstanding either forgetting his owne life or neglecting the daunger present but hauing a good horse ventreth his own death to haue the death of his mā At length with much difficultie recouering the bank with his sword drawn pursueth his prouoker Who hauing not so good an horse and seeing himselfe in daunger of taking reineth hys horse submitteth his necke vnder hys hande to strike The prince whose feruent stomack the water of the whole riuer could not quench a little submission of his man did so extinct that the quarrel fell his anger ceased and his sword put vp without any stroke geuen And so both returned to theyr game good friendes agayne Auesb. Nich. Triuet In the first beginning of his raig●e this Kyng had much adoe in Wales where he had diuers conflictes wyth the welshmen whom at last he subdued cut down theyr woodes suppressed rebellions vanquishing theyr kings Lewline and his brother ordeined his eldest sonne Edward borne in the same Countrey to be Prince of Wales This Lewline Captayne of the welshmen here mentioned rebelling agaynst king Edward asked counsayle by way of coniuration what euent should come vpon his attempt To whom it was tolde that he should goe forward boldly for doubtlesse he should ryde thorough Chepeside at London with a crowne on his head Whiche so came to passe For he being slayne hys head was caried through Chepe with a Crowne of siluer to London bridge whereby men may learne not to seeke nor stick to these vayne prophesies which though they fall true yet are but the traynes of the deuill to deceyue men About this time was a great earthquake and suche a rotte that consumed a great multitude of sheep in the land through the occasion as they say of one scabbed shepe that came out of Spayne The king returning from Wales to England ordred certayne new lawes for the wealth of the realme Among many other this was one that authoritie was geuen to all Maiors Baili●es other officers to see execution and punishment of all Bakers making bread vnder the sise with pillory Of Milners stealing corn with the tumbrel c. And within two yeares after the statute of Mortinayne was first enacted which is to meane that no man should geue vnto the Churche any landes or rentes without a speciall licence of the king About which tyme also being the 7. yeare of his raigne 297. Iewes for mony clipping were put to execution In whiche same yeare began first the foundation of the blacke Friers by Ludgate And the towne of Bosten was greatly wasted the same yeare with fyre The halfepeny and farthinges began first to be coyned the selfe tyme which was the 8. yeare of hys raygne The great conduit in Chepe began the fourth yeare after to be made anno 1248. And the yeare next following the newe worke of the Churche of Westminster begon as is afore premonished in the thyrd yeare of Henry 3. was finished whiche was 66. yeares in edifiyng the Iewes were vtterly banished this Realme of England the same tyme for whiche the commons gaue to the kyng a fifteene anno 1291. After that the country of Wales was brought in a full order and quiet by the hewing downe of the woodes and casting down the old holdes and building of new whiche all was brought to perfect end about the 24. yeare of thys kings reigne then ensued an other broile as great or greater with Scotland to the great disquiet of the king and the realme of England many yeares after This trouble first began by the death of Alexander king of Scots who dyed without issue left aliue behinde him Although Fabiane in that 7. booke of hys Chronicle affirmeth that he left 3. daughters the eldest maryed to sir John Bailol the secōd to Robert Bruce the thyrd to one Hastinges But this in Fabian is to be corrected as which neyther standeth with it selfe is clearely conuinced by the witnes and history of Rob. Auel bury and also 〈◊〉 Gi●burne For first if king Alexander had left his eldest daughter marked to Syr Iohn Bailol then what cōtrouersie might rule among the Lords about succession needing so diligent and anxious deciding by the king of England Secondly what clayme or title could the king of Norway haue to the crowne of Scotland which was one of the chalengers claiming the sayd crowne in the behalfe of Margaret the nece of the forsayd king Alexander her graunfather if the eldest daughter of the father had heue left aliued Thirdly what can be more playn when by the affirmance of the foresaid story is testified that K. Alexander had 2. wiues Of the second whereof he had no issue Of the first had two Children Alexader which died before his father and Margaret maried to the kyng of Norway whiche died also before her Father of whom came Margaret the ●ece of Alexander and daughter to the king of Norway afore mentioned And the also dyed in the iourny betweene Norway and Scotland the fourth yeare after the decease of her grandfather Wherfore as this matter standeth most cleare so let vs now returning frō whence we digressed prosecute the rest that foloweth After that Alexāder thus as is said departed without issue also Margaret his ●iece in Norway was deceased the matter came in a great doubt among the nobles of Scotland especially 12. by name to whome the right of the crowne should next pertayne After much variaunce among parties at length the election
Beware therefore most noble Prince and take heede that in your daies and time the liberties of the church be not taken away which God forbid or diminished in any iote For if your glorious name shoulde be blotted therw t there be thousands which would chronicle the same to perpetuall memory Wherefore most Christian Prince if such as trusted after their death for no other life but only for fame renowne liued a life most godly vertuous how much more ought we Christians which looke after another life by our wel doings here to win vs a perpetuall name memory after our death And you besides if you shuld dishonor your name and fame what a matter were it considering how the kings of Fraunce were euer counted the most christian princes and most bountiful towards the church geuing examples to other princes how to enrich their churches liberties thereof And now especially if your grace the church in some places being in great persecution which God forbid should shew light to other to pul and take away that whych was geuen by your forefathers to the church What might the world say For then by the like reason might the Emperor depriue the Church of all which was giuē to it by Constantine the Emperor Also other kings would do the like in their Realme God forbid that your highnes shuld geue such example And for my parte I woulde rather wish my selfe to be deade then geue you such counsel that in so pernitious and naughty a matter you shoulde be example to other Especially when the kings of France your predecessors were defenders alwaies against such y● went about to take away the liberties from the church which is the office of a king Ieronymus sayth vpon Ieremy which is foūd also in the 24. quaest 5. cap. Regnum C. Princeps After this maner let the princes of the world know and vnderstand how they are boūd to make an accōpt to God for the Church which they take vpon them to keepe Note you also read some examples out of stories commentaries what regarde the kings of France had in obseruing those things and see you by the●r example to follow and do the like And then shall it be verified in your grace which is wrytten in the 37. chapter of Eccle. A wise man shall obtaine honour amongst his people As also in the 3. of the same He that honoreth his mother is like one that gathereth treasure together Fourthly I say that he in deede doth honor the King which perswadeth hym to do that whereby his conscience is not hurt For aboue all things a Christen man ought to beware howe to doe that thing which should be a grudge vnto his conscience because the life is more then is meate Mat. the 6. chap. And assuredly I beleeue that your grace wold not commit that thing willingly wherw t your conscience shuld be burdened for all the worlds good and that iustly For the more miraculously God hath called your highnes to the state of a King and hath indued you with hys grace So much the more you ought to haue and take hede that you offende him not For it is to be doubted whether in doing the cōtrary he will not be the more greuously displeased with you as hee was with Saule 1. Reg. chap. 15. Consider therefore most soueraigne Lorde y● at what time you were crowned you sware only these things folowing no other First that you would defend and maintaine the canonicall law priuilege and iustice graunted to the Byshops and the church and as much as in you did lie to enlarge and amplify the same Also that by your arbitre●●t all christian people at all times should keepe the true peace of God his church Also that you should forbid to all nations al kind of sacrileges spoylings and iniquities Also that in all kinde of iudgements you should will and command equity and mercy Also that throughout your whole territory and iurisdiction you shuld sincerely withal your indeuour study to exterminate cut off from the Church the noted heretikes which all and no other your Maiestie sware to fulfill at the time of your Coronation vnder the leaue correction of the Lorde Peter which affirmed you were sworne to none other thing besides Now therefore seing it is a canonical priuilege of the church in the heart of the whole Cano. 6. qu. 1. Quicunque litem habens incorporate when also by custome which is canonicall it came in ● that the Church and spiritualtie may haue cognition in a number of cases against which diuers articles haue bene here layde in If this amongst the laitie should not be obserued in the Church your graces conscience therby might somewhat be burdened In like maner if you be bound with all your whole might and power to procure that al whole Christendome should keepe the true peace of God and his church much more haue you to procure the same amongst your owne Barons people who euermore were all one with the Church And alwayes where any church was in honor and estimation there were belonging to it 20. sho●t Barons knightes whose office as it was to defend the Church so was it the part of the Church to pray for them to offer sacrifice for them vnto God And to this end that blessed S. Lewes so much laboured in his time who whē the greatest Barons of his realme had confederate to suppresse these liberties of the Church had consulted to geue him to that ende the hundreth part of their goods would neuer condescend therunto but alwais dissuaded thē therfro and finally by his authoritie sealed and cōfirmed these liberties of the Church Consider here your maiestie how that pope Innocētius at that time proceded against those Barons c. I dare be bold to say that if there should be now dissention betwene the Prelates and Barons it wold not be long before the comminalty would vsurpe to rule and beare domination As by experience it hath bene seene in many places likewise by practise we of late myght haue sene at what time the people stomaking the spiritualtie in the parties of Campania and Burgundie at last rose and made in euery towne a king and therwtall caused the officers which brought citations absolutions from the pope and other to be well banged and not long after made insurrection against the Lords temporal and serued them with the like sauce vntill that by the kings power they were suppressed many of them hanged And this doubtles was in the daies of Lewis last king of that name Truely the noble men ought not to be griued with that that the Church is possessed wtal For that there be few of them who haue not their brothers and kinsfolkes which liueth and are maintained by the goods and reuenues of the Church Amongst whome if they should deuide their inheritance perhappes they would bring a
for other as wel the great as the small ceremonies of the lawe It is plaine that the tithes were geuen to the sonnes of Leui for their seruing in the tabernacle in the temple of the Lord as the first fruites were geuen to the priestes and also part of the sacrifices so were the vowes for their ministery as it appeareth in the booke of Numbers the 22. chapter But forasmuch as the labor of those sacrifices did cease at the comming of Christ howe should those thyngs be demaunded which were ordained for that labour And seeing that the first fruits were not demaunded of Christians which first fruits were then rather and soner demanded then the tithes why must the tithes be demanded except it be therefore paraduenture because that the tythes be more worth in value then be the first fruites Secondly why are the lay people boūd to the paiment of tithes more then the Leuites and the priests were to the not hauing of possessions of realties Lordships amongst their brethren seeing that the selfe same lawe in the selfe same place where he sayeth that the tithes ought to be geuen to Leuites sayth also to the Leuites you shall be contented with the offering of the tithes and haue none other thyng amongst your brethren Wherefore seeing that the Priestes be bounde to the not hauing of temporall Lordshippes how are the lay people boūd by that law of God he meaneth and not of man to the paiment of tithes Thirdly as touching circumcision which is one of the greater ceremonies of the lawe and was geuen before the law was an vniuersall ceremonie concerning the couenant betwene God hys people and was so much regarded in the law that thereof it was sayde The soule whose flesh shall not be circumcised in the foreskin shall pearysh from amongest his people yet did thys ceremonie vtterly cease at the comming of Christe although that certayne of the Iewes did say in the primatiue Church that the Christians must needes kepe the commandement of circumcision with the faith whom Paule reprooueth wryting thus to the Galathians the 4. chapter where he speaketh of the children of the bondwoman of the free woman which do signify the two Testaments But we O brethren are the children of the promise after Isaac but like as at that time he that was borne after the flesh did persecute hym which was after the spirit euen so it is now also But what saith the scripture Throw out the bondwoman and her sonne The sonne of the bondwoman shall not be heire wyth the sonne of the free woman Wherefore brethrē we are not the sonnes of the bondwoman but of the free S●ad ye stedfast in the liberty wherwith Christ hath deliuered you and be not ye holden againe vnder the yoke of slauery Behold I Paule say vnto you if you be circumcised Christ shall nothing profite you For I testifie againe to euery man that circumciseth hymselfe that hee is bounde to keepe all the whole law Ye are vtterly voide of Christ whosoeuer will be iustified in the law are fallen from grace In like maner we may reason if we be bounde to tything we are debters bound to keepe al the whole law For to say that men are bound to one ceremony of the law not to the others is no reasonable saying Either therefore we are bound to them all or to none Also that by the same olde lawe men are not bound to pay tithes it may be shewed by many reasons which we nede not any more to multiply encrease because the things that be sayd are sufficient Whereupon some do say that by the Gospell we are bound to pay tithes because Christ saide to the Pharisies Math. 23. chapter Woe be you Scribes and Pharisies whych pay your tithe of Mint of Anets seede and of commin and leaue iudgement mercy and trueth vndone being the weightier things of the lawe both shuld ye haue done these things and also not haue left the other vndone O ye blinde guides that straine out a gnat and swallowe vp a camell Thys worde soundeth not as a commaundement or manner of bidding wherby Christ did command tithes to be geuen but it is a worde of disalowing the hypocrisie of the Pharisies who of couetousnesse dyd rather weigh and esteeme tithes because of their owne singulare commoditie rather then other great and weighty commaundements of the lawe And me seemeth that our men are in the same predicament of the Pharisies which doe leaue of al the ceremonies of the old law keping onely the cōmandement of tything It is manifest and plaine inoughe by the premisses and by other places of the scripture that Christ was a priest after the order of Melchisedech of the tribe of Iuda not of the tribe of Leuie who gaue no newe commaundement of tything of any thing to him and to hys priests whome he would place after him but whē hys Apostles sayd to him Behold we leaue all things haue followed thee what then shall we haue hee did not aunswere them thus Tithes shall be paide you neither dyd he promise them a temporall but an euerlasting rewarde in heauen For hee both for foode and also apparell taught his disciples not to be carefull Be ye not carefull for your life what ye shall eate or for your body what ye shall put on Is not the life of man more worth then the meate and the body more worth then apparell Beholde ye the birds of heauen whych do not sow nor reape neither yet lay vp in barnes and yet your heauēly father feedeth them And as for apparell why should you be carefull Consider the lillies of the field how they grow they labour not neither do they spinne c. In conclusion he sayth be not yee carefull saying what shall we eate or what shal we drinke or wherwithall shall we be couered For all these things doe the Gentiles seeke after For your father knoweth that you haue neede of all these things First therefore seeke yee for the kingdome of God and the righteousnes therof and all these things shall be cast vnto you And Paule ryght well remembring this doctrine instructeth Timothe and sayth thus But we hauing foode and wherewithall to be couered let vs therewyth be contented And as the Acts of the Apostles doe declare In the first conuersion of the Iewes at Ierusalem they had all thinges common and to euery one was diuision made as nede required Neither did the priestes make the tithes theyr owne proper goodes For like as it was not meete that the lay people being conuerted should haue proprietie of goods euen so neither that priests should haue proprietie of tithes So that if the priests started backe from feruent charitie in chalenging to themselues the proprietie of tithes it is no meruaile of departing backward as do the priests frō the perfection of charitie also of the laitie to be
father and to the sonne Ouer this I beleue that through counsell of this most blessed Trinity in most cōuenient time before ordeined for the saluation of mankinde the second person of this Trinity was ordeined to take the forme of mā that is the kinde of mā And I beleue that this secōd person our Lord Iesu Christ was conceiued through the holy ghost in the wombe of the most blessed virgin Mary without mans seed And I beleue that after 9. monethes Christ was borne of this most blessed virgine without any payne or breaking of the closser of her wombe and without filth of her virginity And I beleue that Christ our Sauiour was Circumcise● in the eight day after his birth in fulfilling of the law and his name was called Iesus which was so called of the Angel before that he was conceiued in the wombe of Mary his mother And I beleue that Christ as he was about xxx yeare olde was Baptised in the floud of Iordane of Iohn Baptist and in the likenes of a Doue the holy Ghost descēded there vpon him a voyce was heard from heauen saying Thou are my welbeloued sonne in thee I am full pleased And I beleue that Christ was moued then by the holy ghost for to go into desert and there he fasted 40 dayes 40. nightes without bodely meat and drink And I beleue that by and by after his fasting when the manhood of christ hūgred the fiend came to him and tempted him in glottony in vayne glory and in courtise but in all those temptations Christ concluded the fiend and withstood him And then without tarying Iesu began to preach and to say vnto the people do ye penaunce for the Realme of heauen is now at hand I beleue that Christ in all his time here liued most holity and taught the will of his father most truly and I beleue that he suffered therfore most wrongfully greatest repriests and despisinges And after this when Christ woulde make an end here of this rēporal life I beleue that in the day next before that he would suffer passiō in the morne In forme of bread and of wine he ordeined the Sacrament of his flesh and hys bloud that is his owne precious body gaue it to his Apostles for to eat cōmaunding them and by them all their after commers that they should do it in this forme that he shewed to them vse themselues and teach and comō forth to other men and womē this most worshipfull holyest sacrament in mindfulnes of his holyest liuing of his most true preaching of his wilfull and patient suffering of the most paynefull passion And I beleue that thys Christ our Sauiour after that he had ordeined this most worthy Sacrament of his own precious body he wēt forth wilfully agaynst his enemies and he suffered them most paciently to lay their hands most violently vpō him and to binde him and to lead him forth as a theefe to scorne him and buffet him and all to blow or file him with their spittinges Ouer this I beleue that Christ suffered most meekly and paciently his enemies for to ding out with sharp scourges the bloud that was betwene his skinne and his flesh yea without grudging Christ suffered the cruell Iewes to crowne him with most sharpe thornes and to strike him with a reede And after Christ suffered wicked Iewes to draw him out vpon the crosse for to nayle him thereupon hand and foote And so through his pitifull nayling Christ shed out wilfully for mans life the bloud that was in his vaynes And then Christ gaue wilfully his spirit into the hāds or power of his father so as he would whē he would christ died wilfully for mās sake vpon the crosse And notwithstāding that Christ was wilfully paynefully most shamefully put to death as to the world there was left bloud and water in his hart as before ordeined that he would shedd out this bloud this water for mās saluation And therefore he suffred the Iewes to make a blinde knight to thrust him into the hart with a speare and this the bloud and water that was in his hart Christ would shed out formans loue And after this I beleue that Christ was taken downe from the crosse and buried And I beleue that on the third day by power of hys Godhead Christ rose againe from death to life And the xl day therafter I beleue that Christ ascēded vp into heauen and that he there sitteth on the right hand of the father almighty And the fifty day after this vp going he sēt to hys Apostles the holy ghost that he had promised them before And I beleue that Christ shall come iudge all mankind some to euerlasting peace and some to euerlasting paines And as I beleue in the father in the sonne that they are one God almighty so I beleue in the holy Ghost that he is also with them the same God almighty And I beleue an holy church that is all they that haue bene and that now are alwayes to the end of the worlde shal be a people the which shall endeuour them to know to keepe the commaundements of God dreading ouer all thing to offed God and louing and seeking most to please him And I beleeue that all they that haue had yet haue and all they that yet shall haue the foresayd vertues surely standing in the belief of God hoping stedfastly in his mercyfull doinges continuing to theyr end in perfect charitye wilfully paciently and gladly suffering persecutiōs by the example of Christ chieflye and his Apostles all these haue theyr names written in the booke of life Therfore I beleue that the gathering together of this people liuing now here in this life is the holy Church of God fighting here on earth agaynst the fiend the prosperity of the world and theyr fleshly lusts Wherfore seing that all the gathering together of this Church before sayd and euery part therof neither coueteth nor willeth nor loueth nor seketh any thing but to eschew y● offēce of God to do his pleasing will meekly gladly and wilfully with all mine hart I submit my selfe vnto this holy Church of Christ to be euer buxome obedient to that ordinaūce of it of euery member therof after my knowledge and power by the help of God Therfore I knowledge now and euermore shal if God will that with all my hart and with all my might I wil submit me onely to the rule and gouernaunce of them whō after my knowledge I may perceiue by the hauing and vsing of the before sayd vertues to be members of the holy Church Wherfore these articles of belief and al other both of the olde law and of the new which after the commaundement of God any man ought to beleue I beleeue verely in my soule as a sinful deadly wretch of my cunning and power ought to beleue praying the Lord God for his holy
Pope and all his rablement cannot proue that they be any part of thys Church Also that the Pope with all his fautours may as well be deceiued by a lying spirite as was Achab and all his prophetes and that one true prophet as was Micheas may haue the verity shewed vnto him contra concilium Also that all good Christians ought to cast from them the Popes lawes saying Let vs breake their bandes in sonder and let vs cast from our neckes those heauy yonkes of theyrs Also that where these prelates doe burne one good booke for one errour perhaps conteyned in the same they ought to burne all the books of the Canon law for the manifold heresies contayned in them ¶ And thus muche out of a certaine olde written booke in parthment borowed ouce of I.B. which booke conteining diuers auncient records of the vniuersitie seemeth to belong sometimes to the library of the Uniuersitie bearing the yeare of the compiling thereof 1296. Which computation if it be true then was it written of him or that he recanted before Thomas Arundell Archbishop at Saltwood where he was imprisoned Whereunto I thought also to annexe a certayne godly and most frutefull Sermon of like antiquitie preached at Paules crosse much about the same time learned clerke as I find in one old monument named R. Wimbeldon Albeit among the auncient registers and records belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury I haue an old worne copy of the said Sermon written in very old English and almost halfe consumed with age purposing the said autor beere of bearing also the foresayd name The true copy of which Sermon in his owne speech wherein it was first spoken and preached at the crosse on the Sonday of Quinquagesima and after exhibited to the Archbishop of Canterburie being then as it seemeth William Courtney here foloweth A Sermon no lesse godly then learned preached at Paules Crosse on the Sonday of Quinquagesima ann 1389. by R. Wimbeldon Redde rationem Gillicationis tuae Luce ●i My dere frends ye shullen vnderstond that Christ autor and doctour of trueth in his booke of the Gospell likening the kingdome of heauen to anhousholder saith on this maner Like is the kingdome of heuen to an housholding man that went out first on the morow to hire workemen into his vine Also about the third sixt nienth and enleuente houres he went out and found men stonding idel And sayd to them Go ye into min vineyerde and that right is I wille geue you Whan the day was agoo he clepid his stuward and high to geue echē man a peny The spirituall vnderstonding of this housholder is our Lord Iesu Christ that is head of the houshold of holy Church And thus clepith men in diuerce houres of the day that is in diuerce agees of the werld As in time of law of kinde he cleped by enspiryng Abel Ennok Noe and Abraham In time of the old law Moses Dauid Isay and Ieremy And in time of grace Apostles Martyrs and Confessours and Virgines Also he cleped men in diuers agees some on childhode as Iohn Baptist some on state of wexing as Iohn the Euangelist some in state of manhoode as Peter and Andrew and some in old agee as Gamaliel and Ioseph of Arimathie And all these he clepeth to trauaile in his vine that is the Church and that in diuers maner For right as yee seeth that in tilling of the materiall vine there ben diuers labours for some kutten awey the voyde braunches some maken forkis and railes to beren vp the vine and some diggen away the olde earth fro the rote and leyn there fatter And all this offices ben so necessary to the vine that if any of them faile it shall harme greatly other destroy the vine For but if the vine be kutte she shall waxe wilde but if she be rayled she shall be ouergo with netles and wedis And but if the rote be fatted with donge shee for feblenes shuld waxe baraine Right so in the Church beth nedefull thes three offices priesthood knythode and laborers To priests it falleth to kut away the void braunches of sinnes with the swerd of her tong To knighthode it falleth to letten wronges and thefftes to ben done and to maintaine Goddis law and them that ben teachers therof and also to kepe the londe from enemies of other londes And to labourers it falleth to trauail bodelich and with ther sore swete geten out of the earth bodillech lifelode for hem and other parties And these states beth also nedefull to the Church that none may well ben without other for if priesthod lacked the people for default of knowing of Gods lawe should waxe wilde in vices and deyen gostely And if the knithod laked and men to rulin the puple by law and hardinesse theeues and enemies shulden so encres that no man shuld liue in peace And if the laborers were nought both knightes and priestes must bicome acre men and herdis and els they shuld for defaute of bodily sustenaunce deye And therfore saith clerk Auicenne that euery vnreasonable best if he haue that that kind hath ordeined for him as kinde hath ordeined it he is suffisaunce to liue by himselfe without any helpe of other of the same kind As if there were but one horse other one shepe in the world yet if he had grasse and corne as kind hath ordeined for such beastes he shuld liue well I now But if there ne were but O man in the world though he had all that good that is therein yet for defaut he shuld deie or his life shuld be wors tha if he were naught the cause is this for that thing that kind ordeineth for a mans sustenaunce without other arraieng than it hath of kind accordeth nought to him As though a man haue corne as it commeth from the earth yet it is no meate according to him vnto it be by mans craft chaunged into bread and though he haue flesh other fish yet while it is rawe as kinde ordeined it till it be by mans trauaile sodden rosted or baken it cordit not to mans lifelode And right so wolle that the sheepe beareth mot by mannis diuers craftis and trauailes be chaunged or it be able do cloth any man and certis O man by himselfe shuld neuer doo all these laboures And therefore saith this clerke it is neede that some be acre men some bakers some makers of cloth and some marchaunts to fetch that that on londe fetteth from an other there it is plentie And certis this shuld be a cause why euery state shuld loue other And men of o craft shuld nor despise ne hate men of none other craft fith they be so nedefull euerich to other And oft thelke craftes that ben most vnhonest might worst ben forbore and o thing I dare well say that he that is neither trauailing in this world on studieng on praiers on preaching for helpe of the people as it falleth to
offer this my appeale vnto my Lord Iesu Christ my iust iudge who knoweth defendeth and iustly iudgeth euery mans iust and true cause The 22. Article A vicious and naughty man liueth viciously and naughtely but a vertuous and godly man lyueth vertuously and godly I answer my words are these That the deuision of all humaine works is in two parties that is that they be eyther vertuous or vicious For somuch as it doth appeare that if any man be vertuous and godly and that he do any thing he doth it then vertuously and godly And contrariwise if a man be vicious naught that whiche hee doth is vicious and naught For as vice which is called crime or offence and thereby vnderstande deadly sinne doth vniuersally infect or depraue all the acts and doinges of the subiect that is of the man whiche doth them so likewise vertue and godlines doth quicken all the actes and doyngs of the vertuous godly man in somuch that he being in the state of grace is layd to praye and doe good works euen sleping as it were by a certayn meanes working As S. Augustine S. Gregory and diuers other affirme And it appeareth in the sixt chapter of Luke If thine eye that is to say the minde or intention be simple not depraued with the peruersenes of any sinne or offence all the whole body that is to say all the actes and doinges shall be cleare and shyning that is acceptable and grateful vnto God But if thine eye be euil the whole body is darkned And in the second to the Corin. x. Chapter All thinges that you do do them to the glory of God And lykewise in the first Epistle to the Corinthians and last chapter it is sayd Let all your doinges be done with charitie Wherfore all kinde of lyfe and liuing according vnto charitie is vertuous and godly and if it be without charitie it is vicious and euill This saying may well be prooued out of the 23. chapter of Deuteronomy where God speaketh vnto the people that hee that keepeth hys commaundementes is blessed in the house and in the field out goyng and in comming sleeping and waking but he that doth not keepe his commaundementes is accursed in the house and in the fields in goyng out and comming in sleeping and waking c. The same also is euident by S. Augustine vpon the Psal. where he writeth that a good man in all hys doinges doth prayse the Lord. And Gregory saith that the sleep of saints and holy men doth not lack their merite How much more then hys doinges which proceede of good zeale be not weout reward and consequently be vertuous and good And contrariwise it is vnderstanded of hym which is in deadly sinne of whome it is spoken in the law that whatsoeuer the vncleane man doth touch is made vncleane To this end doth that also appertayne which is before repeated out of the first of Malachie And Gregorie in the first booke and first question sayth we doe defile the bread which is the body of Christ when as we come vnworthely to the table and when we being defiled doe drinke hys bloud And S. Augustine vpon the 146. Psalme sayth if thou doest exceed the due measure of nature doest not abstayne from glottony but gorge thy selfe vp w● dronkennes whatsoeuer laude or prayse thy tongue doth speake of the grace and fauour of God thy life doth blaspheme the same when he had made an end of this article the Cardinall of Cambray sayd The scripture sayth that we be all sinners And agayne if we say we haue nosinne we deceiue our selues and so we should alwayes liue in deadly sinne Iohn Hus aunswered the Scripture speaketh in that place of veniall sinnes the whiche doe not rtterly expell or put away the habite of vertue from a man but do associate thēselues together And a certayne English man whose name was w. sayd but those sinnes do nor associate themselues with anye acte morally good Iohn Hus alledged agayne S. Augustines place vpon 146. Psalme the whiche when he rehearsed they all with one mouth sayd what makes this to the purpose The 13. article The minister of Christ liuing according to his law and hauing the knowledge and vnderstanding of the scriptures and an earnest desire to edifie the people ought to preach notwithstanding the pretended excommunication of the pope And moreouer if the pope or anye other ruler doe forbid any priestes or minister so disposed not to preach that he ought not to obey him I aunswere that these were my wordes That albeit the excommunication were eyther threatned or come out agaynst hym in such sort that a Christian ought not to doe the commandementes of Christ it appeareth by the wordes of S. Peter and the other Apostles that we ought rather to obey God then man whereupon it followeth that the minister of Christ lyuing according vnto this lawe c. ought to preach notwithstanding any pretended excommunication For it is euident that it is commanded vnto the ministers of the Church to preach the word of God Actes 5. GOD hath commaunded vs to preach and testifie vnto the people as by diuers other places of the scripture and the holy fathers rehearsed in my treatise it doth appeare more at large The second part of this article foloweth in my treatise in this maner By this it appeareth that for a minister to preache and a rich man to geue almes are not indifferent workes but duties and commaundementes Wherby it is further euident that if the pope or any other ruler of the Church do commaund any minister disposed for to preach not to preach or a rich man disposed for to geue almes not to geue that they ought not to obey hym And he added moreouer to the intent that you may vnderstand me the better I call that a pretended excommunication the whiche is v●iustly disordered and geuen forth contrary to the order of the law and Gods commaundements For the which the meere Minister appointed therunto ought not to cease from preaching neyther yet to feare damnation Then they obiected vnto him that he had sayd that suche kinde of excommunications were rather blessinges Uerely said Hus euē so do I now say again that euery excommunication by the whiche a man is vniustly excommunicate is vnto him a blessing afore God according to that saying of the Prophet I will curse where as you blesse and contrariwise they shal curse but thou O Lord shalt blesse Then the Cardinal of florence which had alwayes a Notary ready at his hand to write such thinges as he cōmanded him said The law is that euery excommunication be it neuer so vniust ought to be feared It is true sayd Iohn Hus for I do remember eight causes for the whiche excōmunication ought to be feared Then sayd the Cardinall is there no more but eight It may be said Iohn Hus that there be more The
siege After this discomfiture the saying is that Amurathes to keepe his vow made before after his victory at Uarna gaue himselfe into a religious order liuyng a contemplatiue life with certaine other Priestes ioyned vnto him in the forest of Bithynia renouncing the gouernement of his realme to the handes of Haly one of his Princes for thou must vnderstād good Reader that the Turkes also be not without their sondry sectes of Religion no more then we Christians are without our Friers and Monkes In the meane tyme while Amurathes this Turkishe tyrāne was cloystered vp in his Monkish Religion Ioannes Huniades in the kyngdome of Hungary and Castriotus Scanderbeius in Grecia kept great sty●re against the Turkes By reason wherof Amurathes was takē againe from his Monkish vow and profession brought agayne into the field For first Huniades had rescued the whole coūtrey of Hungary and had propulsed moreouer all the might of the Turkes farre frō Seruia And although the peuishe practise of Grgins Prince of Servia had oft tymes disclosed his counsailes vnto the Turkes whereby twise he was brought in daunger yet notwithstandyng through the Lordes gracious protection he was preserued and deliuered by the sayd George vnto the Hungarians agayne after that manfully vāquished the Turkes so that they had no resting place about those parts of Seruia and Bulgaria so long as he liued On the other side in Grecia Castriotus Scāderbeius so foyled the Turke in defence of his coūtrey Epirus and Macedonia and kept Amurathes so short that not ouely he was not able to wynne any great Towne in all Epyrus but also commyng from Epyrus in the straites was so intāgled by Castriotus that he was forced to geue battaile In the which battaile he was so vanquished most part of his army slayne that for grief and sorrow conceaued he fallyng into a rauyng sicknesse was trāsported out of his pauillon vnto Adrianople and there in fury madnesse dyed after he had reigned 34. yeares which was about the yeare of our Lord. 1450. This Amurathes first ordained the order of Ianizarites Which were the men children of such Christians as he conquered tooke captiue whom he forced to renounce the faith of Christ wherein they were Baptized brought them vp in Mahumetes law exercised them in the same feates of warre as he did his owne people and after that they came to mens estate he named them Ianizari that is to say souldiours of a straunge countrey and made them to garde his person They weare on their head is stead of an helmet a white attire made of the grossest sort of woll and in so manifolde aboute their head that it can not bee pierced with a sword It hāgeth downe on the backe with a taile and before on the forehead it is garnished with golde and siluer They were woont to vse bowes and launces in the fielde but nowe they vse dagges as oure horsemen do At the first institution there were but 8000. in theyr garrison but now they be twise so many This of all bondage and seruitude that the Christians suffer vnder the Turke is most intollerable and greatly to be of all true Christians lamented For what can godly mindes behold more to their griefe then to see their children pulled from the faith of Christ wherein they were baptised and by whose bloud they should eternally be saued and to be instructed and nourished with the blasphemous doctrine of Mahumet and to be professed enemies of Christ and hys Churche to make warre against heauen and to perish euerlastingly And finally what a lamentable thing is it to see and beholde our owne children borne of our owne bodies to become our mortall and cruell enemies and to cut our throtes with their owne hands This seruitude of minde is farre greater then death it selfe which if oure Princes would well consider it would cause them the rather to agree and bende their whole force and power against this cruell enemy ¶ Mahumetes second the ix after Ottomanus AMurathes left behind him three sonnes Mahumete borne of the daughter of Despota Prince of Seruia being twentie yeares of age the second sonne called Turcines the third named Calepinus This Turcines being an infant and but eighteene moneths old was strangled at the commandement of the Turke by his seruant Moses himselfe being there present and beholding the horrible murther And when Moses the executour of the murther had desired him not to pollute his handes with the bloud of his brother he answered that it was the manner of all the Ottoman Turkes that all the other breethren being destroied none should be lefte aliue but one to gonerue the Empire Wherefore Moses was commaunded by the tirant there presently and in his sight to kill the infant This horrible fact when the mother of the childe vnderstoode she crieng out and almost mad for sorrowe cursed the tirant to his face But he to mitigate the rage of his mother at her request being desirous to be reuenged vpon the executour of her sonnes death deliuered the said Moses bound into her hands who then in the presence of the tirant thrust him to the hart with a knife and opening his side tooke out his liuer and threw it to the dogges to be deuoured The third sonne called Calepinus which was but sixe moneths old the foresaid Amurathes his father commended to the custody of Halibassa one of his Nobles who to gratifie and please the tirant betraied the infant brought him vnto him and thereupon he at the tirants commandement was strangled Some affirme that in the stead of Calepinus another child was offered vnto the tirant and that Calepinus was conueied to Constantinople and after the taking of Constantinople was caried to Uenice and then to Rome to Pope Calixt where he was baptised and afterward came into Germany to Fridericke the Emperour and there was honorably enterteined kept in Austrich during his life Where note how the mercifull prouidence of God whom he list to saue can fetch out of the diuels mouth And note moreouer touching the foresayde Halibassa the betraier of the infant how he escaped not vnreuēged For Mahumet vnderstanding him to be a man of great substance and richesse thorough forging of false crimes with great torments put him to death to haue his richesse for this tirant was geuen to insatiable auarice Thus this bloudy Mahumete began his regiment with horrible murther after the example of other cursed tirants his predecessours Although this Mahumete notwithstandyng that hee came of a Christen mother being the daughter of Despota prince of Seruia and by her was brought vp and instructed from his childhood in the precepts of Christian religiō and maners yet he soone forgetting all gaue himselfe to Mahumetes religion and yet so that he being addicted to neyther Religion became an Atheist beleeuing and worshipping no God at all but onely the Goddesse of
First that they which began to erect these monasteries and celles of Monkes and Nunnes to lyue soly and singlely by themselues out of the holy state of matrimony had forseene what daunger what absurd enormities might and also did thereof ensue both publikely to the Church of Christ priuately to their own soules Secondly that vnto this their zeale deuotion had bene ioyned like knowledge doctrine in Christes gospell especially in the article of our free iustification by the faith of Iesu Christ. Because of the lacke wherof as wel the builders founders therof as they that were professed in the same seeme both to haue run the wrong way to haue bene deceiued For albeit in them there was a deuotion zeale of mynd that thought well in this their doyng which I wil not here reprehend yet the end and cause of their deedes buildings cannot be excused beyng contrary to the rule of Christes Gospel for so much as they did these things seeking thereby merites with God and for remedy of theyr soules and remission of their sinnes as may appeare testified in their owne recordes wherof one here I thought to set forth for probation of the same Read this Charte if it please thee gentle Reader of king Ethelbald his donation charter giuen to churches and religious persons which Ethelbald was the builder as is sayd of Peterborough the wordes of his record and instrument be those * The donations and priuiledges granted and geuen by King Ethelbald to religious men of the Church PLerumque contingere sole●it pro incerta temporum vicissitudine vt ea quae multarum fidelium personarum testimonio consilioque roborata fuerint fraudulenter per contumaciā plurimorum machinamenta simulationis sine vlla consideratione rationis periculose dissipentur nisi autoritate literarum testamento Chyrographorum aeternae memoriae comittantur Quapropter ego Ethelbaldus Rex Merciorum pro amore caelestis patriae remedio animae meae studendum esse praeuidi vt eam per bona opera liberam efficerem in omni vinculo delictorum Quoniam enim mihi omnipotens Deus per misericordiam clementiae suae absque vllo antecedente merito sceptra regiminis largitus est ideo libenter ei ex eo quod dedit retribuo Huius rei gratia hanc donationem me viuente concedo vt omnia monasteria Ecclesiae regni mei à publicis vectigalibus operibus oneribus absoluantur nisi instructionibus arcium vel pontium quae nulli vnquam prosunt Praeterea habeant famuli Dei propriam libertatem in fructibus siluarum agrorum in captura piscium ne munuscula praebeant vel regi vel principibus nisi voluntaria Sed liberi Deo seruiant c. By the contentes hereof may well be vnderstand as where he sayth pro amore caelestis patriae pro remedio animae pro liberatione animae absolutione delictorum c how great the ignoraunce and blindenesse of these men was who lacking no zeale onely lacked knowledge to rule it withall seeking their saluation not by Christ onely but by their owne deseruings and meritorious deedes Which I recite not here to any infamy or reprehensiō of them but rather to put vs in minde and memory how much we at this present are bound to God for the true sincerity of his truth hidden so long before to our foreauncetors and opened now to vs by the good will of our God in his sonne Christ Iesu. This onely lamēting by the way to see them to haue such works and to lacke our fayth and vs to haue the right fayth and to lacke their workes And this blinde ignoraūce of that age thus aboue prenoted was the cause not onely why these kinges builded so many Monasteries vpon zealous superstition but also why so many of them forsaking their orderly vocation of Princely regiment gaue themselues ouer to Monasticall profession or rather wilfull superstition Concerning the names and number of which kings that were professed Monkes is sufficiently in the storye before declared the names of whome wee shewed to be seuen or eight within the space of these two hundreth yeres Such was then the superstitious deuotiō of kings Princes in that age and no lesse also to bee noted in Queenes and kings daughters with other noble women of the same age and time The names of whom it were to long here to recite As Hilda daughter to the nephew of Edwine king of Northumberland Abbesse of the house of Ely Erchengoda with her sister Ermenilda daughters of Ercombertus king of Kent whiche Erchengoda was professed in Saint Brigets order in Fraunce Item Edelberga wyfe and Queene to Kyng Edwyne of Northumberland and daughter of kyng Anna which was also in the same house of S. Brigit made a Nunne Item Etheldreda whō we terme S. Eldride wife to king Ekfride of Northumberland who beyng maried to two husbands could not be obtained to geue her consent to either of them during the space of 12. yeares but would needes liue a Uirgin and was professed Nunne at Helings Werburga was the daughter of Vlferus king of Mercians made Nunne at Ely Kinreda sister of king Vlferus and Kinswida her sister were both Nunnes professed Sexburga daughter of kyng Anna king of Mercians and wyfe of Ercombert kyng of Kent was Abbesse at Ely Elfrida daughter of Oswy kyng of Northumberland was Abbesse of Whitney Mildreda Milburga and Milguida all three daughters of Merwaldus king of West Mercians entred the profession and vow of Nūnish virginitie Kineburga wife of Alfride king of Northumberland and sister to Ofricus king of Mercians and daughter of king Penda was professed Abbesse of the Monastery in Glocester Elfleda daughter of Oswy king and wyfe of Peda sonne of king Penda likewise inclosed her self in the same profession and vow of Romish chastitie Likewise Alfritha wyfe to king Edgar And Editha daughter to the sayd Edgar with Wolfrith her mother c. All which holy Nunnes with diuers mo the Romish catholikes haue canonised for Saintes and put the most part of thē in their Calender and onely because of the vowe of chastitie solemnly professed Concerning the which chastitie whether they kept or no little I haue to say against them and lesse to sweare for them But whether they so kept it or not if this gift of chastitie which they professed were geuen them of God small prayse worthy was it in them to keepe it If it were not geuen them I will not say here of them so much as hath bene sayd of some other which sufficiently haue painted out to the world the demeanour of these holy votaries But this will I say that although they kept it neuer so perfectly yet it is not that which maketh saints before God but only the bloud of Christ Iesus and a true fayth in him Likewise remayneth that as we haue declared the deuotion
of these noble women which professing Monastick lyfe haue cast of all worldly dignitie and delightes so we should also intreate of such noble men who among the Saxon kings in lyke zeale of deuotion haue geuen ouer themselues from the world as they thought to the contemplatiue life of Monkish profession The names of whō as in the Catalogue of the Saxon kings before is described be these to the number of ix A Table of such Saxon Kings as were after made Monkes 1. Kynigilsus king of Westsaxons 2. Iue king of Westsaxons 3. Ceolulfus king of Northumberland 4. Eadbertus king of Northumberland 5. Ethelredus king of Mercia 6. Kenredus king of Mercia 7. Offa king of Eastsaxons 8. Sebbi king of Eastsaxons 9. Sigebertus king of Eastangles Of whiche kynges and their doynges what is to be iudged looke gentle Reader before pag. 133. By these historyes it is apparaunt what mutations what perturbations and what alteratiō of state hath bene in this Realme of Britayne first from Brittaynes kings to Romaines then to Britaynes agayn afterward to the Saxons First to vij altogether raigning then to one c. And this alteratiō not onely happened in the ciuile gouernment but also followed in the state Ecclesiastical For as in the Britaynes tyme the Metropolitan sea was in Londō so in the Saxons time after the comming of Austen it was remoued to Cāterbury the Catologue and order of which Metropolitanes from the tyme of Austen to Egbertus is thus as in the history of Malmesberiensis described ¶ The names and order of the Archbishops of Caunterbury from Augustine to the tyme of king Ethelbert 1. Augustinus 16. 2. Laurentius 5. 3. Mellitus 5. 4. Iustus 3. 5. Honorius 25. 6. Deus dedit 10. ● Theodorus 22. ¶ Hitherto from Augustine all the Archbishops of Caunterbury were Italians and foreiners 8. Berctualdus English 37 In his tyme the Monasterie of S. Martin was builded in Dorobernia by Witredus hys brother kings of Kent 9. Tacuinus 3 10. Nothelinus 5   11. Cuthbertus 17 This Cutbert after his death forbad all funerall exequies or lamentation for him to bee made William Malm. De vitis Lib. 1. 12. Breguinus 3 13. Lambrihtus or Lambertus 27 In his tyme king Offa translated the Metropolitane sea from Caunterbury to Lichfield by the graunt of Pope Adrian beyng ouercome with Apostolicall arguments as sayth Flores Hist. that is with money   Ethelardus 13 15. Vlfredus 28 16. Fegeldus 3 m. This Ethelardus by his Epistles to Pope Leo obtayned the Metropolitane sea agayne to Cāterbury 17. Celnochus 41 Duryng the course of these 17. Archbishops of Cant. in Rome passed in the meane tyme 34. Popes of whome partly heretofore we haue declared And thus much touching the tyme of the seuen kingdomes of the Saxones rulyng together in Englande from the raygne of Hengist vnto Egbert the first Kyng and Monarche of the whole lande after the expulsion of the Britaynes NOw remayneth by the grace of Christ in the next booke followyng to prosecute the order of such kings as principally raigning alone had this realme in their possession from the tyme of Egbert king of Westsaxons to the comming of William Conqueror the Normand comprehending therin the rest of the next 300. yeares with the actes state of Religion as in that space was in the Church wherin may appeare the declining tyme of the Church and of true Religiō preparing the way to Antichrist which not long after followed For here is to be noted that during yet this mean tyme Sathan as is sayd was bound vp from his raging and furious violence counting from the tyme of Constantinus to the next loosing out of Sathan which was foretold by the Reuelation of S. Iohn aboue mentioned to be a thousand yeares Wherof by the order of the history Christ graunting more shall be sayd hereafter The ende of the second Booke THE THIRD BOOKE CONTEINING THE next 300. yeares from the raigne of King Egbertus to the tyme of William Conquerour NOW remayneth likewise as before I did in describing the discent and diuersitie of the seuen kings altogether raigning and ruling in this land so to prosecute in like order the lineal succession of them which after Egbert king of Westsaxones gouerned and ruled soly vntill the conquest of William the Normand first expressing their names afterward importing such acts as in their tyme happened in the Church worthy to be noted Albeit as touchyng the actes and doyngs of these kings because they are sufficiently and at large described and taken out of Latine writers into the English tong by sondry authors and namely in the story or Chronicle of Fabian I shall not spende much trauaile therupon but rather referre the reader to him or to some other where the troublesome tumulis betwene the Englishmen and the Danes at that tyme may be seene who so listeth to read them Onely the Table of their names and raigne in actes done vnder their raigne I haue compendiously abridged vsing such breuitie as the matter would suffer ¶ A Table of the Saxon Kings which ruled alone from King Egbert vnto William Conquerour Egbertus raygned 37. yeares and had issue Athelwulfus raigned 20. yeares had by his wife Osburga Ethelbaldus raigned 5. yeares Ethelbertus raigned 6. yeares Etheldredus raigned 5. yeares Aluredus or Alfredus raigned 28. yeares Edwardus raigned 24. yeares Adelstanus raigned 16. yeares Elfrede and Ethelwald● Edmond raigned 6. yeares Edwin raigned 4. yeares Edgar raigned 16. yeares Edwardus raigned 4. yeares Ethelredus raigned 36. yeares Edmond Irenside raigned 2. yeres Alfredus Edward the Confessor who raigned 24. yeares Edredus raigned 9. yeares Egelwardu● Here is to be noted that before the raigne of Edward the confessor the Danes obtayned the crowne vnder their captaine Canutus who raigned yeares 19 Haraldus Harefoote sonne of Canutus 4 Hardeknoutus sonne of Canutus 2 Edwar. the confessor an englishmā sonne of Etheldred 24 Haraldus sonne of Erle Godwine an vsurper 1 William Conqueror a Normand ¶ King Egbertus IN the raigne of Brigthricus a little before mentioned about the yere of grace 7●5 there was in his dominion a noble personage of some called Egbert of some Ethelbert of some Athelbright who being feared of the same Brigthricus because he was of a kingly bloud nere vnto the crowne was by the force conspiracie of the forenamed Brigthricus chased pursued out of the land of Britam into Frāce where he endured till the death of the sayd Brigthricus After the hearing whereof Egbert sped him eftsoones out of Fraunce vnto his countrey of Westsaxe where he in such wise behaued himselfe that he obteined the regiment and gouernance of the abouesaid kingdom Bernulphus king of Mercia aboue mentioned with other kings had this Egbert in such decisiō that they made of him diuers scoffing gestes and scorning rimes at which he susteined for a time But when he was more established in his kingdome had