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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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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
reading nor for such as be learned yet I shall desire both you and them to consider in it the necessity of the ignoraunt flocke of Christ committed to your gouernement in this Realme of England Who as they haue bene long led in ignoraunce and wrapt in blindenesse for lacke specially of Gods word and partly also for wanting the light of history pity I thought but that such should be helped their ignoraunce relieued and simplicity instructed I considered they were the flocke of Christ and your subiectes belonging to your account and charge bought with the same price and hauing as deare soules to the Lord as other And though they be but simple and vnlearned yet not vnapt to be taught if they were applyed Furthermore what inconuenience groweth of ignoraunce where knowledge lacketh both I considered and experience dayly teacheth And therefore hearing of the vertuous inclination of your Maiesty what a prouident care Zeale full of solicitude you haue minding speedely I trust to furnish all quarters countryes of this your realme with the voice of Christes Gospel faythful preaching of his word I thought also not vnprofitable to adioyne vnto this your godly proceedinges and to the office of the ministery the knowledge also of Ecclesiasticall history which in my minde ought not to be separate from the same that like as by the one the people may learne the rules and preceptes of doctrine so by the other they may haue examples of Gods mighty working in his Church to the confirmation of their fayth and the edification of Christian life For as we see what light and profite commeth to the Church by histories in olde times set forth of the Iudges Kinges Machabees the Actes of the Apostles after Christes time so likewise may it redound to no small vse in the Church to knowe the Actes of Christes Martirs now since the time of the Apostles Besides other manifolde examples and experimentes of Gods great mercies and iudgementes in preseruing his Church in ouerthrowing tyrauntes in confounding pride in altering states kingdomes in conseruing Religion against errours and dissentions in relieuing the godly in brideling the wicked in losing and tying vp againe of Sathan the disturber of common weales in punishing transgressions as well against the first table as the second wherin is to be seene Idolatry punished blasphemy plagued contempt of Gods holy name and religion reuenged murder with murder rewarded Adulterers Wedlockbreakers destroied periuries extortions couetous oppressions and fraudulent councels come to nought with other excellent workes of the Lord the obseruing and noting whereof in histories minister to the readers therof wholesome admonitions of life with experience and wisedome both to know God in his workes and to worke the thing that is godly especially to seeke vnto the sonne of God for their saluation in his fayth onely to finde that they seeke for and in no other meanes The continuance and constancy of which fayth the Lord of his grace and goodnes graunt to your noble Maiesty and to his whole beloued Church and all the members of the same to euerlasting life Amen Ad doctum Lectorem Ioh. Foxus COgitanti mihi versantique mecum in animo quàm peri●ulosa res aleae sit emittere nunc aliquid in publicum quod in man●s oculósque multorū subeat his praesertim tam exulceratis moribus temporibúsque vbi tot hominum dissidijs tot studijs partium tot morosis capitibus tam rigidis censuris Criticorum sannis feruent ferè omnia vt difficillimum sit quicquā tam circumspectè scribere quod non in aliquam calumniandi materiam rapiatur perbeati profectò foelicésque videnturij quibus eum vitae cursū tenere liceat vt in otio viuentes cum dignitate sic alienis frui queant laboribus velut in theatro ociosi sedentes spectatores vt nullum interim ipsis uel ex actione taedium vel ex labore periculum metuendum sit Me vero nescio quo pacto longe diuersa quidem hactenus exercuit vitae ratio quippe cui nec fortunae illam foelicitatem in cuius complexibus tam multos suauiter foueri video nec otij amoenitatem experiri vix etiam per omnem vitam degustare in continuo laborum ac negotiorum feruore ac contentione contigerit Quanquam de fortuna parum queror quam semper contempsi quin neque de laboribus multum dicturus si modo lobores ij tantum vel prodesse vel placere caeteris possent hominibus quantum me priuatim atterunt incommodántque Nuncad meae infoelicitatis cumulum accedit in super quod in eo argumenti genere laborandum fuit quod praeter lugubrem rerum ipsarum materiam praeter linguae inamoenitatem praeter tractandi difficultatem quae vix nitorem recipiat orationis eo porro autorem ipsum redigit angustiae vt neque falsa narrare sine iniuria historiae nec verum dicere sine magna sua inuidia odi● que multorum liceat Nam cum in eo historiae argumento mihi versandum fuit quod non ad superiorum modo temporū res gestas altéque repetitas pertineat sed hanc ipsam aetatem nostram nostraeque gentis nunc homines etiamnum praesentes viuôsque sic attingat sic perfricet sic designet quemadmodum in hoc materiae genere necessario faciundum fuit quaeso quid hîc mihi aliud expectandum sit nisi postquā frustrà me defatigando valetudinem attriuerim oculos perdiderim senium acciuerim corpus exhauserim demum vt post haec omnia multorum me hominum odijs sibilis inuidiae ac calumniae exponam In tot istis asperitatibus cum nihil me tutum praestare poterit non Caesar non Monarchae non Rex non Regina non vlla huius mundi praesidia preter solam diuini numinis potentem deteram principiò igitur atque ante omnia huc ceu ad tutissimum asylum me recepi huic me librúmque commendaui commendo Tum vero insuper in eodem domino tuum illum candorem docte piéque Lector eāque tuam humanitatem appellare vol●i qua ex humanioribus literis studijsque te scio praeditum quo nostris his fudoribus tuae approbation ●●●cedat calculus aut si approbationem non mereamur saltem ne fauoris desit benignitas cui si appro●atum iri hanc historiae nostrae farraginem senserimus caeterorum iudicia obtrectatorum leuius feremus Nam alioquì non defuturos sat scio qui varijs modis nobis facessent molestiam Habebit hic momus suos morsus sycophanta suos sibilos nec deerit Calumniatori sua lingua aculeus quem infigat Hic fidem detrahet historiae Ille artificium in tractando alter diligentiam vel in excutiendis rebus iudicium desiderabit Illi forsan operis displicebit moles vel minus disposita seruatâque temporum ratio Et si nihil horum fuerit attamen in tanta
heard Peter preache Christ receaued straightway the holy Ghost Peter himselfe confessed and for his confession hadde the keyes of heauen Math. 16. Zacheus receaued the person of Christ into his house and withal receaued saluation both to him and his whole houshold Luc. 19 What a sinner was Mary which had no lesse in her then vij deuils yet because she set her hart and affectiō vpon that person many sinnes were forgiuen her Luc. 7. The right hand theefe how farre was he from all works of the law yet by faith entred he iustified into Paradise the same day with christ Luc. 23. In like maner although the poore Publicane came to the Church with lesse holines after the law yet went he home to his house more iustified then the Pharisie with all his workes and all by reason of fayth Luc. 18 The parable of the prodigal sonne which was lost yet reuiued agayne Also of the lost groat and of the lost sheepe which went astray and was found againe what do these declare but that which is lost by the lawe to be recouered by faith and grace And how oft doe we reade in the Gospels Thy faith hath saued thee c. Iesus seing their beliefe c. He that beleueth in me I will raise him vp in the last day c. Beleue also in me c. He that beleeueth in me hath euerlasting life c. Without me ye can do nothing c. He that is in me c. He that looueth me c. He that heareth me c. He that abideth in me c. He that receaueth me c. Onles ye eate my flesh and drinke my bloud c. That they may receaue remission of sinnes by their faith in me c. Act. 26. To him al the Prophets giue witnes to haue remission of sinnes whosoeuer beleeueth in his name c. Act. 10. He that beleeueth is baptised Mat. vlt. He that beleueth in me shall do the works that I do greater then these c. And likewise in the writings of S. Paule how often doe we heare the name of Christ almost in euery thirde or fourth line where hee still repeateth In Christo Iesu per Christum Iesum Per Iesum Christum Dominum nostrum c. Qui credunt in ipso c. Omnes qui credunt in eo c. Credentes illo in eum credentes illi in nomen eius in nomine Domini nostri Iesu Christi c. Beleue saith S Paule to the Iaylor in the Lorde Iesus and thou shalt be saued and thy whole house c. Actes 16. Thus then thou seest as the passion of Christ is onely the efficient or personall cause immediate of our saluation so is faith onely the instrumentall or meane cause that maketh the merits of Christ to vs auaileable For as the Passion of Christ serueth to none but such as do beleue so neither doth faith as it is onely a bare qualitie or action in mans minde it self iustifie vnles it be directed to the body of Christ crucified as to his obiect of whom it receueth all his vertue And therfore these ij must alwayes ioyntly concurre together faith and Christ Iesus crucified As for example when the children of Israel were byd of Moses to looke vp to the brasen Serpent neither could the Serpent haue helped them except they had looked vp nor yet their looking vpward haue profited them vnles they had directed their eyes vpon the said Serpent as the only obiect set vp to the same purpose for them to behold So our faith in like case directed to the bodye of Iesus our Sauiour is onely the meanes wherby Christes merits are applied vnto vs and we now iustified before God according to the doctrine of S. Paule who in expresse wordes defining to vs what this faith is and how it iustifieth sayth If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and beleeue with thy hart that God raised him from death thou shalt be saued c. Rom 10. Besides this what action or qualitie soeuer is in man either hope charitie or any other kinde of faith and beleeuing be it neuer so true except it apprehend this obiect which is the body of Christ the sonne of God it serueth not to iustification And that is the cause why we adde this particle Onely to faith and say that faith Onely in Christ iustifieth vs to exclude all other actions qualyties giftes or works of man from that cause of iustifying for so much as there is no other knowledge nor gift giuen of God to man be it neuer so excellent that can stand before the iudgement of God to iustification or wherevnto any promise of saluation is annexed but onely this faith lookyng vp to the brasen Serpent that is to the body of Christ Iesus for vs crucified As for example when the Turke sayth that he beleeueth in one liuyng God that made heauen earth his beliefe therin is true yet it iustifieth him not because it lacketh the right obiect which is Christ. So when the Iewe saith that he beleeueth in one God maker of heauen and earth and beleeueth also the same God to be omnipotent merciful iust and true of promise and that he hath elected the seede of Abraham true it is that he beleeueth and yet all this serueth him not because Christ the sonne of God is not ioyned to all And though the said Iew should be neuer so deuout in his prayers or charitable in almose or precise in keeping the law beleeued neuer so stedfastly that he is elect to be saued yet he is neuer the neerer to saluation for all this so long as his faith is not grounded vpon y● head cornerstone which is the person and body of Christ Iesus the true Sauiour After like sort it may be sayd of the Papist when he saith that he is Baptised and beleeueth in the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost three persons and one God and also confesseth Iesus Christ to be the sonne of God which died for our sinnes and rose againe for our righteousnes c. his beleife therin is true indede would saue him if he did stay his saluation in this faith and vpon Christ his Sauiour Onely according to the promise and grace of God and go no farther But that he doth not for neither doth he admit Christ onely to be his perfect Sauiour without the helpe of the patrons heades aduocates and mediatours nor yet permitteth his faith in Christ Onely to be the meanes of his iustification but setteth vp other by meanes as hope charitie sacrifice of the Masse confession penaunce satisfaction merites and pardons supposing thereby to worke his iustification before God contrary to the word of promise to the Gospell of grace to the doctrine of S. Paule whereof we shall see more the Lord willing hereafter And thus much of the
not synners because they should sinne so neither doth infirmitie of falling diminish the grace of Christ but rather doth illustrate the same as it is written My strength is made perfect in infirmitie 2. Cor. 12. and againe Where sinne aboundeth there superaboundeth also grace In remission of synnes therefore these foure thinges must concurre together the cause that worketh which is the sacrifice of Christes body 2. the promise that offereth 3. fayth that apprehendeth 4. the repenting sinner that receaueth And although sinnes daily do grow which daily prouoke vs to craue remission yet as touching the cause that worketh remission of our daily sinnes the meanes which apprehendeth and applieth the sayd cause vnto vs they remayne alwaies one perpetuall besides which no other cause nor meanes is to be sought of man So that to them that be repenting sinners be in Christ Iesu there is no law to condemne them though they haue deserued condemnation but they are vnder a perpetual kingdome and a heauen full of grace and remission to couer their sins and not to impute their iniquities through the promise of God in Christ Iesu our Lord. And therefore wicked and impious is the doctrine of them fyrst which seeke any other cause of remission then onely the bloud of our Sauiour Secondly which assigne any other meanes to apply the bloudsheding of Christ vnto vs besides onely faith Thirdly and especially which so limite and restraine the eternall priuiledge of Christs passion as though it serued but only for sinnes done without and before faith and that the rest after Baptisme committed must be done away by confession pardons and satisfactory deedes And al this riseth because the true nature of the law of the Gospell is not knowen nor the difference rightly considered betwene the times of the one and of the other Neither againe doe they make any distinction betweene the malediction of the law and vse of the law And therfore whensoeuer they heare vs speake of the law meanyng the malediction of the law to be abolished therevpon they maliciously slaunder vs as though we speak against the good exercises of the lawe and giue liberty of fleshe to carnall men to liue as they list Whereof more shal be sayd by the Lordes grace as place and time shall hereafter require Of free will COncerning free will as it may peraduenture in some case be admitted that men without the grace may doe some outward functions of the law and keepe some outward obseruaunces or traditions so as touching thinges spirituall apperteining to saluation the strength of man being not regenerate by grace is so infirme and impotent that he can performe nothing neither in dooing well nor willing well Who after he be regenerated by grace may worke and doe wel but yet in such sort that still remaineth notwithstanding a great imperfection of flesh a perpetuall repugnaunce betwene the flesh and spirit And thus was the originall Church of the auncient Romanes first instructed From whome see now howe farre this latter Church of Rome hath degenerated which holdeth and affirmeth that men without grace may performe the obedience of the law prepare themselues to receaue grace by working so that those works may be meritorious and of congruitie obteine grace Which grace once obteined then men may say they perfectly performe the full obedience of the law and accomplish those spirituall actions and workes which God requireth and so those workes of cōdignitie deserue euerlasting life As for the infirmity which still remaineth in nature that they nothing regarde nor once speake of Of Inuocation and Adoration OUer and besides these vncatholike and almost vnchristian absurdities and defections from the Apostolicall faith aboue specified let vs consider the maner of theyr Inuocation not to God alone as they should but to dead men saying that saintes are to be called vpon tanquam mediatores intercessionis as Mediatours of intercession Christum vero tanquam mediatorem Salutis and Christ as the Mediator of Saluation And affirme moreouer that Christ was a Medyatour onely in time of his Passion Which is repugnaunt to the wordes of S. Paule writing to the old Romanes chap. 8. where he speaking of the intercession of Christ Which is saith he on the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for vs c. And if Christ be a Mediatour of saluation what needeth then any other intercession of the Saintes for other sutes for saluation being once had what can we require more or what lacketh he more to be obtained of the Saintes which is sure to be saued only by Christ And yet in their Catholicke deuotions why doe they teach vs thus to pray to the blessed virgine Salua omnes qui te glorificant i. Saue all them that glorifie thee c. if saluation onely belong to Christ vnles they study of purpose to seeme contrary to themselues Hetherto also perteineth the worshipping of reliques and the false adoration of Sacramentes that is the outward signes of the things signified cōtrary to the 7. principle before page 24. Adde to this also the prophanation of the Lordes Supper contrary to the vse for which it was ordeined in reseruing it after the Communion ministred in setting it to sale for money and falsely perswading both them selues and other that the Priest doth merite both to him selfe that saith and to him that heareth Ex opere operato sine bono motu vtentis c. That is Onely by the meere doing of the worke though the partie that vseth the same hath no good motion in him c. * Of Sacramentes Baptisme and the Lordes Supper AS touching Sacramentes their doctrine likewise is corrupt and erroneus 1. First they erre falsely in the number For where the institution of Christ ordeineth but two they contrary to the fourth principle aboue prefixed haue added to the prescription of the Lords worde fine other Sacraments 2. Secondly in the cause finall they erre For where the word hath ordeined those Sacraments to excite our faith and to giue vs admonitions of spiritual things they contrariwise doe teach that the Sacramentes doe not onely stirre vp faith but also that they auayle and are effectuall without faith Ex opere operato sine bono motu vtentis c. as is to be founde in Thom. Aquine Scotus Catharinus and other moe 3. Thirdly in the operation effect of the Sacramentes they faile where the contrary to the minde of the Scriptures doe say that they giue grace not onely do signifie but also conteine and exhibite that which they signifie to wytte grace and saluation 4. Fourthly they erre also in Application applying their Sacramentes both to the quicke and the dead to thē also that be absent to remission of sinnes and releasing of payne c. In the Sacrament of Baptisme they are to be reprooued not onely for adding to the simple wordes of Christs
that whosoeuer killeth you shall thinke that he doth God great good seruice Thē suffered the Martirs of God such bitter persecution as is passing to be tolde Sathan still shooting at this marke to make them to vtter some blasphemy by all meanes possible Marueilous therefore was the rage both of the people Prince specially against one Sanctus which was Deacon of the congregation of Uienna and agaynst Maturus being but a litle before baptised but yet a worthy souldiour of Christ and also against Attalus being borne in Pergama which was the foundation and pyller of that congregation and also against Blandina by whome Christ sheweth that those things which the world esteemed vyle and abiect to be glorious in Gods sight for the very loue which in hart and deede they beare vnto him not in outward face onely For when all we were afrayd specially her mistres in flesh who also was her selfe one of the nūber of the foresayd martirs least happely for the weakenes of body she woulde not stande strongly to her confession the foresaid Blandina was so replenished with strength boldnes that they which had the tormenting of her by course from morning to night for very werines gaue ouer fell downe were themselues ouercome confessing that they could do no more against her marueiled that yet she liued hauing her body so torne and rent And testified that any one of those torments alone without any moe had ben inough to haue plucke the life from her body But that blessed woman fighting this worthy battell became strōger stronger as often as she spake these words I am a Christian neither haue we committed any euill it was to her a marueilous comfort and bolding to abide the torments Sanctus also another of the Martyrs who in the middest of his tormentes induring more paines then the nature of a man might away with also at what time the wicked supposed to haue heard him vtter some blasphemous words for the greatnes intollerablenes of his torments paines that he was in abode notwithstanding in such constancy of mind that neither he told them his name nor what countryman he was nor in what Citie brought vp neither whether he was a free man or a seruaunt but vnto euery question that was asked him he aunswered in the Latine toung I am a Christian and this was al that he confessed both of his name citie kinred and all other thinges in the place of execution neither yet could the Gentils get any more of him whereupon both the Gouernour tormentours were the more vehemently bent against him And when they had nothing to vexe him with all they clapped plates of Brasse red hote to the most tenderest parts of his body wherewith his body indede being schorched yet he neuer shronke for the matter but was bold and constant in his confession being strengthened and moystened with the fountaine of liuely water flowing out of Christs side Truely his body was a sufficient witnes what torments he suffered for it was all drawne together and most pitifully wounded and scoarched so that it had therwith lost the proper shape of a man in whose suffering Christ obtained inspeakeable glory for that he ouercame his aduersa●y and to the instruction of other declared that nothing els is terrible or ought to be feared where the loue of God is nor nothing greeuous wherein the glory of Christ is manifested And when those wicked men began after a certayne time againe to torment the Martyr hoped well to bring it to passe that either they should ouercome him in causing him to recant by rei●erating his torments now whē his body was so sore swollen that he might not suffer a man to touch him with his hande or els that if hee died vnder their handes yet that thereby they should strike such feare into the harts of the rest to cause them to deny Christ. But they were not only disappointed here in but also contrary to the expectation of men his bodye was in the latter punishment torments soupled restored and toke the fyrst shape and vse of the members of the same so that the same his second torment was by the grace of Christ in steede of punishment a safe medecine Also Sathan now thinking to haue setteled himselfe in the hart of one Byblides being one of them which had denied Christ and thinking to haue caused her beyng a weake and feable woman in faith to haue damned her soule in blaspheming the name of God brought her to the place of execution inforcing to wrest some wicked thing out of the mouth of the Christians But she in midle of her torments returning to her selfe and waked as it were out of her dead slepe by that temporall paine called to her remembraunce the paynes of hell fire and against all mens expectations reuiled the tormentors saying How should we Christians eate young infants as ye reported of vs for whom it is not lawfull to eate the bloud of any beast Upon that so soone as she had confessed her selfe to bee a Christian she was Martyred with the rest Thus when Christ had ended those tyrannicall torments by the patience sufferaunce of our Saintes the diuell yet inuented other engynes and instruments For when the Christians were cast into prison they were shut vp in darke and ougly dongeons and were drawne by the feete in a racke or ingine made for that purpose euen vnto the fift hole And many other such punishmentes suffered they which the furious ministers stirred vp with deuilish furye are wont to put men vnto so that very manye of them were strangled killed in the prisons whom the Lorde in thys maner would haue to enioy euerlasting life set forth his glory And surely these good men were so pittifully tormented that and if they had had all the helpe medicines in the world it was thought impossible for them to lyue to be restored And thus they remaining in prison destitute of al humaine helpe were so strengthened of the Lord and both in body and minde confirmed that they comforted stirred vp the myndes of the rest the yonger sor●e of them whiche were latter apprehended put in prison whose bodies had not yet felt the lash of y● whip were not able to indure the sharpness of their imprisonment but died of the same The blessed Photinus who was a Deacon to the bishop of Lyons about 90. yeares old and a very feeble or weake man could scarsely draw breath for the imbecilitie of his body yet was he of a liuely courage spirit For the great desire he had of martyrdome when he was brought vnto the iudgement seate although his bodye was feeble and weake both because of his old age and also through sicknes yet was his soule or life preserued to this purpose that by the same Christ might triumph be glorified He being
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
be no Purgatory nor that the Suffrages of the Church do auaile the dead either to lesse the paine of them that be destinate to hell or to increase the glory of them that be ordained to saluation 7. Item they hold that the soules out of the bodies departed whether they haue done good or euill haue not their perfect paine nor glory but are reserued in a certain place till the day of iudgement 8. Item they condemne the church of Rome for mixting cold water in their sacrifice 9. Item they condemne the Church of Rome for that as wel women as priests annoynt children when they baptise them on both shoulders 10. Item Dicunt panem nostrum panagiam i. They call our bread Panagia 11. Item they blame the Church of Rome for celebrating their Masse on other daies beside Sondaies and certaine other feastes appoynted 12. Also in this the Greeke Church varieth from the Latine for they haue neither creame nor oyle nor sacrament of confirmation 13. Neither do they vse extreme vnction or anoyling after the maner of the Romane church expounding the place of S. James of the spirituall infirmitie and not corporall 14. Item they enioyne no satisfaction for penance but only that they shewe themselues to the Priests annoynting them with simple oyle in token of remission of sinnes 15. Item onely on maundy Thursday they consecrate for the sicke keeping it for the whole yeare after thinking it to be more holy vpon that day consecrate then vppon any other Neither doe they fast any saterday through the whole yeare but onely on Easter euen 16. Item they geue but onely 5. orders as of Clearkes Subdeacons Deacones Priestes Byshops when as the Romaine Church geueth ix orders after the ix orders of Aungels 17. Moreouer the Greciās in their orders make no vow of chastitie alledging for them the 5. Canon of N. * Ego praesbyter vel Diaconus vxorem causa honestatis non reijciam c. i. I. N. Priest or Deacon will not forsake my wife for honestie sake 18. Item euery yeare the Grecians vse vpon certaine dayes to excommunicate the Church of Rome and all the Latines as heretickes 19. Item among the sayde Grecians they are excommunicate that beate or strike a Priest Neither doe their religious men liue in such Priestly chastitie as the Romane Priests doe 20. Item their Emperour among them doeth ordaine Patriarches Bishops and other of the Clergy and deposeth the same at his pleasure also geueth benefices to whō he lusteth and retaineth the fruites of the same benefices as pleaseth him 21. Item they blame the Latine Churche because they cate not flesh egges and chese on Friday and do eate flesh on Saterdaies 22. Item they holde against the Latine men for celebrating without the consecrated Churche either in the house or in the field And fasting on the Sabboth day And for permitting menstruous wemen to enter into the Church before their purifying Also for suffering dogges and other beastes to enter into the Church 23. The Grecians vse not to knele in all their deuotions yea not to the body of Christ as the register termeth it but one day in the whole yeare saying and affirming that the Latines be goates and beastes for they are alwayes prostrating themselues vpon the ground in their praiers 24. The Grecians moreouer permit not the Latines to celebrate vpon their altars And if it chaunce any Latine Priest to celebrate vpon their altar by and by they washe their altare in token of abomination false sacrifice And diligently they obserue that whē soeuer they do celebrate they do but one Liturgie or masse vpon one altar or table that day 25 Item they dissent from the Church of Rome touching the order and maner of the proceding of the holy Ghost These Articles wherein is declared the difference betwene the East and West church of the Grecians and Romanes as I found them articulate and collected in an ancient autentical register of the churche of Hereforde so I thought heere to inserte them leaue them to the consideration of the Reader Other foure articles moe in the same Register be there expressed concerning sunonie vsurie not w e them forbidden and touching also their Emperour and how they teach their children to hurt or danify by any maner of way the Latine priestes c. Which articles for that either they seme not truly collected out of their teachings or els not greatly pertinent to the doctrine of Religion I ouerpasse them To the purpose now of our storie againe When certaine of these aboue prefixed were mooued in the foresaid Councel to be discussed namely concerning the assertion of proceeding of the holy Ghost and concerning leauened bread in the ministration of the Lords Supper Anselme as is aboue sayd was called for who in the tracration of the same Articles so besturred him in that councell that hee well liked the Pope and them about him as mine author recordeth Wherupon touching the matter of vnleauened bread how indifferētly he seemed there to reason and what he writeth to Valerane Byshop of Nurenburgh therof ye shal beare by a pece of his letter sent to the sayd Byshop the copie whereof here insueth ¶ Anselme Seruant to the Church of Canterburie to Valtram Bishop of Nurenburgh Epistola 3 25. post initium AS concerning the sacrifice in which the Grecians thinke not as we doe it semeth to many reasonable Catholike men that which they do not to be against the Christian faith for bothe he that sacrificeth vnleauened and leauened sacrificeth breade And where it is red of our Lord whē he made his body of bread that he tooke bread and blessed it is not added vnleauened or leauened Yet it is certaine that he blessed vnleauened bread peraduenture not because the thing that was done required that but because the supper in which this was done did geue that And wher as in an other place he called himselfe and his flesh bread because that as many as liue tēporally with this bread so with that bread he liueth for euer He sayth not vnleauened or leauened because both alike are breade For vnleauened leauened differ not in substance as some thinke like as a new man afore sinne an olde rooted man in the leanen of sinne differ not in substance For this cause therefore only he might be thought to call himselfe and his flesh bread and made his body of breade because that this breade vnleauened or leauened geueth a transitorie life and his bodie of bread because that this bread vnleauened or leauened giueth a transitorie life and his body geueth euerlasting life not for that it is either leauened or vnleauened Although it be a cōmandement in the lawe to eate vnleauened breade in the passeoner where all things are done in a figure that it might be declared that Christ whom they loked for was pure cleane and we that should eate his body were admonished to be likewise
a great army besiegeth the citie Ferraria that alwaies loued the Emperour full well which Citie when the Popes Legate had assauted sharpely the space of 5. monethes and could not winne the same he deuised with hymselfe to sende for Salingwerra out of the towne by way of a parlie promising his faith and truth to him for his safe returne Who by the perswasion of Hugo Rambartus that said without peril he might doe the same being but by way of Parley was comming to the legate who preuenting him in his iourney tooke him as prisoner contrary to his trueth and fidelitie And thus gate he Ferraria and deliuered the keping therof to Azones Astensis And that the Popes Legate thus falsified his trouth and circumuented the capitaine olde man Salingwerra the same is confessed of the Popes frendly Historiographers to be but a Stratagem or warlike pollicie But to returne againe About the same time also the Uenetian nauie at the mount Garganum chased 12. galleis of the Emperors which were appointed to the keeping of that coste spoiled brent and wasted all the region and farther tooke one of the Emperors great ships being driuen by tempest and weather into the hauen Sipontinum fraught with men and munition Fredericus againe getting on hys side the Lucenses the Uolateranes the Genenses the Aretines and diuers Cities besides in Hetruria to helpe that countrey came to Pisas and Uiterbium which tooke parte with him Some say that the names and factions of the Gibellins Guelphes sprang from Fredericke that by them hee might spie and know hauing recourse to all the townes and cities in Italie which tooke part with and fauoured the Pope and which the Emperour and called the one by the name of Gibellines and the other by the name of Guelphes But for that both Blondus and Platina and some others bring no sufficient proofe thereof but onely by slender coniecture I rather cleaue to the opinion of Nauclerus Hermanus Antonius Florentinus and other such wryters which say that these Guelphes and Gibellines in Italie tooke their beginning of Cōradus 3. Fredericus his great vncle being Emperour And that these Guelphes were dedicated to the Pope of Guelphus the yonger brother of Henry the proud and that those which were called Gibellines were appoynted either of Conradus himselfe or els of his sonne being brought vp in the Lordship of Uaiblingen But to our purpose The Pope when he vnderstoode that Fredericke was come to Uiterbium he was very heauy for that he feared he would come to Rome the good will of which Citie the Pope much mistrusted He therefore caused a supplication to be drawne portraying about the same the heads of Peter and Paule with a sharpe and contumelious oration he much defaced the Emperour promising them euerlasting life gaue them the badge of the crosse as many as would arme themselues and fight against the Emperour as against the most wicked enemy of God the Church Now when the Emperour marching somewhat neare to Rome gates behelde those whome the Pope had with his goodly spectacle of S. Peter and S. Paule and wyth his alluring oration stirred vp against him and marked with the badge of the crosse to come foorth in battell against him Disdaining to be accompted for the enemye of the Church who had ben therunto so beneficial geuing a fierce charge vppon them put them soone to flight and as many as hee tooke cutting off that badge frō them he caused to be hanged From thēce he marching into Campania his owne kingdomes leuied a great masse of money mustred new bandes and augmented his armie and in these bandes he retained the Saracens also And to the intent he might finde the Saracens the more trustie vnto hym hee appoynted them to inhabit in a city named Luceria For which thing although the Papisticall wryters doe greatly blame and opprobriously write of Fredericke yet notwythstanding Nicholaus Machiuellus doth wryte that therefore he retained them least that through the Popes execrable curses he should be quite destitute of souldiours as was Fredericus Barbarossa a litle before his graundfather when that of Alexander the Pope hee was excommunicated as ye haue heard After this when the Emperor had greatly afflicted by battaile the Popes Ecclesiasticall consorts such as conspired with the Pope against him and that he had wasted destroyed Beneuentum the mount Casenum Sora for that they toke part with the Pope against him Frederick when he had manned the City Aquila marched forth with a great hoste both of horsemen and footemen to Picenum that he might vanquish his enemyes in Italie And by the way he besieged the strong towne of warre named Asculinum which was also conuerted to the popes faction and rebellion He there hauing vnderstanding what the Popes assistents had done with the Princes electours and other princes of Germanie especially with Wenseslaus king of Bohemia and Otho Palatinus wryteth his letters vnto them In the which first he sheweth how that those contumelies and spitefull wordes which the Pope blustered out against him are light vpon himselfe And how the bishops of Rome haue taken to them of late such hart of grace and are become so loftie that not only they seeke to bring Emperours Kings and Princes vnder their obedience but also seeke howe to be honoured as gods And say that they cannot erre neither yet be subiect or bounde to any religion and that it is lawful for them to do al things what they list neither that any accoumpt is to be sought or demanded of their doings or els to be made of them to any so impudent are they in these their affirmations And further as Princes they commaund and that vnder paine of cursing that men beleue euery thing they say howe great a lie soeuer it be In so much that by this couetousnes of his all things goe backwarde and the whole state of the common weale is subuerted neither can there any enemie be founde more hurtfull or perillous to the Churche of God then he Hee wrote vnto them furthermore that he to whom the greatest charge and dignitie was in the whole common weale appoynted and committed seeing and perceauing to hys great perill their good harts willes practises towardes him would with all the power and hability that God had geuen him do his indeuour that he which in the likenesse of the shepheard of the flocke the seruaunt of Christ and chiefe prelate in the Churche sheweth himselfe so very a wolfe persecutour and tyrant may be remoued from that place and that a true carefull shepheard of Gods flocke may be appoynted in the Church Wherefore he exhorteth them that if they desire the safetie and preseruation of the whole state of the cōmon weale and Empire that they be vnto him no hinderers but furtherers of his purpose and proceedings least otherwise they also should happē to fall into
the presence of vs common Notaries here vnder written especially called and required for this purpose as it is contained in the subscriptions heere vnder the famous noble men the Lord Lewes sonne of the French king Guido of S. Paule and Iohn Drocem Earles and William of Plesiano Lord of Vitenob knight Moued as they saide with a feruent faith with affection of sincere loue and zeale of charitie to be shewed to the holy Romish church and hauing pitie from their heart on their mother the vniuersall church which as they sayde is oppressed daungerously vnder the rule of the saide Lord Boniface and suffereth outragious defacing and losse and pitying the right faith as they say in which standes the saluation of soules which alas for pitie in their times miserably pineth away perisheth for the lacke of wholesome gouernment of the Churche through all Christendome and earnestly taking paines as they said for the repairing and enhaunsing of the Catholicke faith specially seeing it was necessary for the same church for the foundation of the faith and health of the soules that none shoulde rule the fold of the Lordes flocke but the true and lawfull shepheard and also because the same Churche was the spouse of Christ that hath no spot nor wrincle all errour offence wickednes wrong shoulde be put away and saluation peace and quietnesse through Gods mercy might be procured to the whole worlde which they say lieth in warres and darkenesse by the wicked deedes cursed workes and hurtful examples of the sayd Boniface They said and laid against the said Boniface heresie and other diuers horrible cursed faultes wherein they affirmed him to be tangled and commonly and notoriously reported the king himselfe being present with Archbishops Bishops and other Prelates and Churchmen which were assembled for to entreat of their owne matters and matters of their Churches beside Barons Earles and other noble men whose names are vnder written The said William propounded obiected against him swearing by the holy Gospell of God which hee corporally touched that he coulde prooue all and euery the premisses to be true And the sayd William of Plesiano sware further this othe that he beleued he could prooue the premisses and that he woulde pursue to the full ende against the saide Boniface in the generall Councell where when and afore whomsoeuer of right it ought to be done requiring earnestly the sayd Lord king as a champion of the faith and defender of the Church that for declaring of this truth to the praise of Gods name to the increase promoting of the Catholike faith to the honour and wealth of the vniuersall Church and of all Christen people and the congregation of the sayd generall councel that he woulde helpe and bestowe his profitable labour with souldiors and other like for the loue of men and zeale to iustice because his kingly house was euer a ruler of the trueth and that he wold earnestly require the Archbishops Bishops other Prelates and that he woulde be effectually instant with them The Earles knights themselues besought earnestly many of the same prelates as they were pillers of the Church the faith that they would helpe and effectually bestowe their labour to the calling and assembling of the said councell by all waies and meanes lawful according to the ordinances of the holy fathers and decrees of the canons But when the prelates heard fully vnderstode such obiections oppositions and requests as is aforesaid and considered that such a matter not onely was most hard but needed wise counsell they departed out of the same place But on the Friday next following i. the 14. day of the same moneth of Iune the foresaid Lord king being present and also the Lords Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors and many witnesses here vnder written the same time being present and in the presence of vs common Notaries heere subscribed and being specially called and required for this purpose the foresayd William of Plesiano Knight sayde propounded affirmed obiected and read as was contained more fully in a certaine paper which he held in his hand whose tenor was after this sort I William of Plesiano Knight say propound and affirme that Boniface which now ruleth the Apostolical sea is a rancke hereticke in heresies and by heresies outragious dedes and wicked doctrines hereafter to be declared which things to be true I beleeue I am able to prooue or els such things as these shall be sufficient to prooue hym a full hereticke in a cōuenient place time and afore whom of right this can or ought to be done This thing I sweare on the holy Gospel of God presently touched of me First that he beleueth not the immortalitie of men and of christen soules but thinking much like as the Saducies did beleeue that there is no euerlasting life and the men can not get at the length ioy but all the lot and part of comfort and gladnes to be in this world and by this meanes he affirmeth that it is no sinne for the body to liue daintely in al dainties And out of the aboundance of this leuen he was not ashamed to say and opēly to cōfesse that he had rather be an asse or a dogge or any other brute beast rather than a Frenchman which thing he would not haue said if he beleued a Frenchmā had a soule that could enioy euerlasting life This thing he taught many men which knowledged this at the point of death and the common report goeth on him thus in these things 2. Also he beleeueth not faithfully that by the wordes ordained of Christ spoken ouer the hoste after the fashion of the Church by a faithfull priest that is lawfully ordered the body of Christ to be there and therefore it commeth to passe that he geneth no reuerence to it no not a litle when it is lifted up of the priest yea he rises not to it but turneth his backe to it and makes himselfe his seat to be honoured where he sitteth rather then the altare where the hoste is consecrate and he is commonly reported to doe this 3. Also he is reported to say that whoredome is no sinne no more than rubbing of the hands together thus commonly runnes the voice and brute 4. Also he saide often that to thrust downe the King and Frenchmen if it coulde not be otherwaies done he would ouerthrow himselfe the whole world the whole Church And when he had sayd so some that stode by said God forbid he answered God graunt And when good men that heard the wordes replied against him that hee should not say so because the church of God all Christen men should suffer great slaunder so he answered I care not what slaunders soeuer come so that the Frenchmen and their pride be destroied for it is necessary that slaunders offences come 5. Item he called againe allowed a booke made by M. Arnold of Newton conteining and smelling of heresie
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
ought as neare as I can to chuse the best part Wherfore I surely trust that M. I. Wickliffe is one of the number of thē which are saued The words of Christ moneth me therunto saying Math. 7. Doe ye not iudge that ye be not iudged Luke the 6. Do not condemn ye shal not be condemned and the wordes of the Apostle 1. Cor. 4 Do ye not iudge before the Lord himselfe do come the which shall opē those things that are hid in darknes to manifest the priuities of all hartes Secondly the loue and charity which I ought to bear vnto my neighbor louing him as my selfe doth moue me thereunto Luk. 10. Thirdly his good fame report moneth me the which he hath of the good Priests of the vniuersity of Oxford not of the wicked commōly of the vulgar sort although not of the couetous proud and luxurious Prelates Fourthly his owne workes writings doe stirre me therunto by the which he goeth about with his whole indeuor to reduce all men vnto the law of Christ specially y● clergy that they shoulde forsake the pompe dominion of this world and with the Apostles lead the life of Christ. Fiftly his owne protestations which he doth oftentimes vse in his sentences often repeating the same doth not a litle moue me Sixtlye his earnest desire and affection which he had vnto the law of Christ doth not a litle allure me therunto disputing of the verity therof the which cannot fayle in any one iote or title Whereupon he made a booke of the verity of the holy Scripture approuing euen vnto the vtter most the trueth of Gods law Wherfore it were too foolish a consequēt to say that because the number of the Prelates and clergy in England Fraunce and Boheme do coūt Iohn Wickeliffe for an hereticke that therfore he is an heretick c. Like as the reason for burning of the bookes for it is written in the first booke of Machabees first chapter that they did burne the books of the Lord tearing them in peeces and whosoeuer was founde to haue kept any bookes of the Testament or will of the Lord or the which obserued and kept the lawe of the Lord they were by the kinges commaundemen put to death If then the burning of these bookes by wicked men did argue or proue the euilnesse of the books thē was the law of God euill and nought So likewise the burning of S. Gregories bookes and diuers other sayntes and good men should argue proue that they were euill naughty men Wherupon as it doth not folow that because the Bishops Scribes and Phariseis with the elders of the people condemned Christ Iesus as an heretick that therfore he is an heretick So likewise doth it not follow of any other man The Byshops maisters of diuity monkes and prelates condemned thys man as an hereticke Ergo he is an hereticke For this consequēt is reproued by Iohn Chrisostom which was twise condemned as an hereticke by the Bishops and the whole clergy Likewise S. Gregory in his bookes was condemned by the Cardinals By like proofe also as they affirme M. Iohn Wickliffe to be an hereticke Iohn Duke of Lācaster a man of worthy memory and progenitor of Henry king of Englande should also be an hereticke For the sayd Duke defēded fauored and greatly loued M. Iohn Wickliffe Ergo the sayd Duke is or was an hereticke the consequent is good The Minor is well knowne vnto the Englishmen The Maior appeareth in the Canon where it is sayd he which defendeth an hereticke c. But these thinges set apart I demaund of the aduersary whether M. Iohn Wickliffe be damned for euer or no If he say that he is damned because he is an hereticke I propounde this vnto him whether M. Iohn Wickeliffe whiles he liued held any false doctrine cōtrary to the holy Scripture If he do affirme it let him then shew what doctrine it is and afterward declare that he held it obstinatly And he shall finde that in his bookes he alwayes wrote most commendable protestations agaynst obstinacye and stifneckednesse And by and by after M. Iohn Stokes in his intimation sayth that M. Iohn Wickliffe in Englād is counted for an hereticke This seemeth also false by the letter testimoniall of the Vniuersity of Oxforde vnto the which there is more credit to be geuē then vnto him And this shall suffise for this present Now as we haue declared the testimony of the Vniuersity of Oxford of Iohn Hus concerning the praise of Iohn Wickliffe It followeth likewise that we set forth and expresse the contrary censure and iudgementes of his enemies blinded with malicious hatred and corrupt affections against him especially of the Popes Councel gathered at Constance proceeding first in condemning hys bookes then of his articles and afterward burning of his bones The copy of which theyr sentēce geuen against him by that counsell here foloweth * The sentence geuen by the Councell of Constance in condemning the doctrine and 45. Articles of Iohn Wickliffe THe most holy and sacred councell of Cōstance making and representing the catholick Church for the extirpation of this present schisme and of all other errors and heresies springing and growing vnder the shadow and pretence of the same and for the reformation and amendment of the Church being lawfully congregate and gathered together in the holy Ghost for the perpetuall memory of the time to come We are taught by the acts and historyes of the holy fathers that the catholicke fayth without the which as the holy Apostle S. Paule saith it is vnpossible to please God hath bene alwayes defēded by the faythfull and spirituall souldiors of the Church by the shield of fayth agaynst the false worshippers of the same fayth or rather peruerse impugners which through their proud curiosity will seeme to know more and to be wiser then they ought to be for the desire of y● glory of the world haue gone about oft times to ouerthrow the same These kindes of warres and battelles haue bene prefigured to vs before in those carnall warres of the Israelites agaynst the Idolatrous people For in those spirituall warres the holy catholick Church through the vertue power of fayth being illustrate●●● the beames of the heauenly light by the prouidēce of God and being holpen by the helpe and defence of the Saints holy men hath alway continued immaculate the darcknes of errours as her most cruell enemyes being put to flight ●he hath most gloriously triumphed ouer all But in these our daies the old and vnclean enemy hath raysed vp new cōtētions strifes that the elect of this world might be knowne whose Prince and captayne in time past was one Iohn Wickliffe a false Christian. Who during his life time taught and sowed very obstinatly many articles cōtrary and agaynst the Christian Religion and the Catholicke fayth And the same
and vnmoueable Awake ye quickely and sleepe nought and stond now strongly for Gods law For Saynt Iohn in the Apocalips sayes blesset be he that awakes for nought to sleepers but to wakers God has behite the crowne of life For the hower is nowe as Paule sayth to vs from sleepe for to arise for he that earelye awakes to me he shall finde me sayth Christ himseluen This waking gostly is good liuing out of sinne this sleepe betokens that which cowardeth a mans hart from gostlye comfort and to stand in the same through a deceaueable sleepe is this that lets a man of the blisse of heauen the fende makes men bold in sinne and ferd to do worship to God death is a likening to a theefe that preuely steales vpon a man that now is riche and full of we le an one he makes him a needy wrech therfore sayd God by S. Iohn in the Apocalips in this wise Be thou waking for if thou wake nought I shall come to thee as a theefe and thou shalt not wit what houre And if the husbandman sayes Christ wist what houre the theefe should come he shoulde wake and suffer him not to vndermine his house Saynt Peter therefore warneth and sayth wake and be ye ware suffer ye no man he sayes as a theefe but wilfullye for Gods loue for it is time as Peter saies that dome begin from the house of God Ye bene the body of Christ sayes Poule that needes must suffer with the head or els your bodyes bene but deade and departed from Christ that is the head And therefore curset be he sayes Poule that loues not Iesu Christ. And who it is that loues him Christe himselfe telles in the Gospell he that has my hestes and keepes them he it is that loues me Cursed he be therfore sayes Poule that doth Christes workes deceiueably Be ye not therefore sayes Poule ashamed of the true witnesse of Iesu Christ for Christ our God sayes in his Gospell he that shames me and my wordes him shall mans sonne ashame when he shal come for to set in the siege of hys Maiesty And each man he sayes that knowes me and my wordes before men in this sinnefull generation and whorish mans sonne shall knowledge him before my father sayes Christ himselfe when he shall come with hys Aungels in the glory of his Father Sithe ye therefore bene Christenmen that is to say Christes men shew in deede that ye bene suche as ye daren shew you the kings men for hit h●d bene as Peter saies better not to haue knowen the way of trueth then after the knowing thereof to be conuerted backeward there from We knowen Christ that is trought we sain all through our beliefe if we turne from him for dred truely wee deny the troth And therefore sith our time is short how short no man knowes but God do we the good that we may to Gods worship when we haue time Be true sayes God to the death and you shall haue the crowne of life And thinke on Iudas Machabeus that was Gods true knight that comforted hartelye Gods true people to be the folowers of his law And geue ye he sayd your liues for the Testament of your fathers And ye shulen winne he sayd great ioy and a name for euermore Was not Abraham he sayd in temptation founden true and was arectet vnto him euermore to righteousnesse Ioseph in time of his anguish he kept truely Gods hest he was made by Gods prouidence Lord of Egypt for his trouth Phinees our fadure louing he sayth the zeale of God tooke the testament of euerlasting Priesthoode Iosue for he fulfillet the worde of God was domes man in Israell Caleph that witnessed in the Church he tooke therefore the heretage he sayth Dauid in his mercy hee gat the siege of the kingdome in worldes Hely for that he loued the zeale of Gods lawe was taken vppe into heauen Ananie Azary and Misaell he sayes weren deliuerer thoore through true beliefe out of the hoat flame of fire True Daniel in his simplenes was deliueret from the Lyons mouthe Bethinke ye therfore he sayes by generation and generation and thou shalt neuer finde that he sayled that man that truely trusted in him And therefore dread you nought he sayes of the wordes of a sinnefull man hys glory is he sayes but wormes and tordes he is to day he sayth y made hye to morow he sayes he is not foundē for he is turned he sayes into his earth agayn the minde of him is perisher Sonnes therefore he sayes be ye comforter and dye manly in the lawe for when ye han done that that Gods commaundes you to doe ye shulen be glorious in him And Dauid the king sayes also on this wise in the Psalter booke blesset be they Lord that keepen thy law in worldes of worldes they shall prayse thee And in Leuiticus sayes God thus gif that ye wenden in mine hestes keepen my commaundementes and done hem I shall I shall bring forth theyt fruit and trees shall be fulfilled with apples And ye shallen eat your bread in fulnes ye shoulen dwell in your lande without drede I shall geue peace in your costes ye shall sleep and no man shall feare you Euill beastes I shall done away from you and sword shall not passe your termes ye shuln pursue your enemies and they shall fall before you fifty of yours shulne pursue an hundreth of heren an hundret of yours a thousand of theyrs your enemies hee saieth shulen fal through sword and your sute I shall he sayes behold you and make you to waxe and ye shall be multiplier And I shall strength with you my couenaunt ye shall eat the aldest and the new shull come in theron And ye shuln cast forth the old I shall dwell in the midst of you And I shall wend amonges you and shal be your God and ye shulne be my people If that ye heare me not ne done nought all my hestes but dispisē my law and my domes and that ye done not tho thinges that of me bene ordener and breken my commaundements and my couenant I shall do these thinges to you I shall visite you surely in nede and brenning which shall dimme your eghenen and shall wast your liues about nought Ye shulne sow your sede for hit shal be deuouret of enemies I shall put my face agaynst you and ye shall fall before your enemies And ye shulen be vnderlings to them that han hatet you ye shall flee no man pursuing And if ye will not be buxome to me I shall adde thereunto thornes and seuen folde blame And I shall all to brast the hardnes of you I shall geue the heauen aboue you as yron the earth as brasse About nought shall your labour be for the earth shall bring you forth no fruit ne tree shall geue none apples to you If that ye wenden agaynst me and will not heare me I
to grace that they might vnderstād truely the truth and haue and vse vertue and prudēce and so deserue to be lightned from aboue with heauenly wisedom so that all their words their workes may be hereby made pleasant sacrifice vnto the Lord God and not onely for helpe of their own soules but also for edification of holy Church For I doubt not but all they that will apply them to haue this foresayd busines shall profite ful me kill both to freds foes For some enemies of the truth through the grace of God shall through charitable folkes be made astonied in their conscience and peraduenture conuerted from vices to vertues and also they that labour to know and to keep faythfully the biddinges of God and to suffer paciently all aduersities shall hereby comfort many frendes And the fourth thing that moueth me to write this sētēce is this I knowe by my sodein vnwarned apposing and aunswering that all they that will of good hart wtout faining able themselues wilfully gladly after theyr cunning and their power to follow christ paciently traueling busily priuily and apertly in worke and in word to withdraw whom soeuer that they may from vices planting in them if the may vertues comforting them furtheryng them that stand in grace so that therwith they be not born vp in vaine glory through presumption of theyr wisdome nor inflamed with any worldly prosperitie but euer meek and pacient purposing to abide stedfastly in that wil of God suffering wilfully and gladly without any grutching what soeuer rod the Lord wil chastise them with that then thys good Lord will not forget to comfort al such men and women in all their tribulations at euery poynt of temptation that any enemy purposed for to doe agaynst them To such faithfull louers specially pacient followers of christ the Lord sendeth by his wisedome frō aboue them which the aduersaries of the truth may not know nor vnderstand But through their old and new vnshamefast sinnes those tyrantes and enemies of southfastnes shal be so blinded obstinate in e●ill that they shall weene themselues to doe pleasant sacrifices vnto the Lorde God in their malicious and wrongfull pursuing and destroying of innocent mens and womens bodyes which men women for theyr vertuous liuing and for their true knowledging of the trueth and theyr pacient wilfull and glad suffering of persecution for righteousnes deserue through the grace of God to be heyres of the endlesse blesse of heauen And for the feruent desire and the great loue that these men haue as to stand in southfastnes and witnes of it though they be sodeinly vnwarnedly brought foorth to be aposed of their aduersaries the holy Ghost yet that moueth and ruleth them thorough his charitie will in that houre of theyr aunswering speake in them and shewe hys wisedome that all theyr enemies shall not agayn say nor agaynst stand lawfully And therfore al they that are stedfast in y● fayth of God yea which through diligent keeping of his commaundementes for theyr pacient suffering of whatsoeuer aduersitie that commeth to them hope surely in his mercy purposing to stand cōtinually in perfect charitie For those mē and womē dred not so the aduersities of this life that they wil feare after their cunning and their power to knoweledge prudently the truth of gods word when where and to whom they thinke their knowledging may profite Yea and though therfore persecution come to them in one wise or an other certes they paciently take it knowing theyr conuersation to be in heauen It is an high rewarde and a speciall grace of God for to haue and enioy the euerlasting inheritance of heauen for the suffering of one persecution in so short time as is the terme of this life For loe this heuenly heritage endles reward is the Lord God hymselfe which is the best thing that may be This sētence witnesseth the Lord God himselfe where as he sayd to Abrahā I am thy meede And as the Lord sayd he was and is the meede of Abraham so he is of all his other saynts This most blessed and best meede he graunt to vs all for his holy name that made vs of naught and sent his onely most deare worthy sonne our Lorde Iesu Christ for to redeeme vs with his most precious hart bloud Amen The examination of William Thorpe penned with hys owne hand KNowne be it to al men that read or heare this writing that on the sonday next after the feast of S. Peter that we call Lammesse in the yeare of our Lord. 1407. I william Thorpe being in prison in the Castle of Saltwoode was brought before Tho. Arundel Archbishop of Canterbury and Chauncellor then of Englande And when that I came to him he stode in a great chamber and much people about him and when that he saw me he went fast into a closit bidding all seculer men that followed hym to go foorth from him soone so that no man was left than in that closet but the Archbishop himselfe and a Phisitian that was called Malueren person of S. Dunstanes in London other two persons vnknowne to me which were ministers of y● law And I standing before them by and by the Archbish. sayd to me William I know well that thou hast this xx winters more trauelled about busily in the north coūtry and in other diuers countryes of England sowing about false doctrine hauing great businesse if thou might with thine vntrue teaching and shrewd will for to infect poysō all this land But through the grace of God thou art now withstanded brought into my ward so that I shall now sequester thee from thine euill purpose and let thee to enuenime the sheep of my prouince Neuertheles S. Paul sayth If it may be as much as in vs is we ought to haue peace with all men Therfore William if y● wilt now meckly and of good hart without any feyning kneele downe and lay thy hand vpō a booke and kisse it promising faythfully as I shall here charge thee that thou wilt submit thee to my correction stād to myne ordinaunce fulfill it duely by all thy cūning and power thou shalt yet find me gracious vnto thee Then sayd I to the archbishop Syr since ye deme me an hereticke out of beleue will ye geue me here audience to tell my beleue And he sayd yea tell on And I sayde I beleue that there is not but one God almighty and in this Godhead and of this Godhead are three persons that is the father the sonne and the sothfast holye Ghost And I beleue that all these three persons are euen in power and in cunning and in might full of grace and of all goodnes For what soeuer that the father doth or can or will that thing also the sonne doth and can and will and in all theyr power cunning and will the holy Ghost is equall to the
dreggis dwellen byneth and the cliere wyne houeth aboue Than shall Christ axe rekenyng of the deedes of mercy reprouyng false Christen men for the leuyng of them rehearsing the deedes of the same and other truth is by the which his trewe seruauntes than folowed hym than shulle thike false seruauntes goe with the deuill whom they haue serued in the earth then swallowyng into the endlesse fire And rightfull men shullen goe into euerlastyng lyfe than shall be fulfilled that is written in the booke of priuitees Woe woe woe to hem that dwellen in the earth Woe to the paynyme that gafe that worshyp to dead Images wrought of mans handes and to other creatures that hee shuld haue gone to GOD that him wrought Woe to the Iewe that trusteth so muchil in the ould law than shall he see Maries sonne deemyng the world whō he despised and set on the Crosse Woe to the false Christen man that knew the will of his Lord and fulfilled it nought Also woe for sinne of thinkyng to thee that thou hast shyt out the meine of God that is mynde of his Passion holy contemplation of his goodnesse and memorie of his benefites fro the chaumber of thine herte and hast made it an house of swyn and a den of theeues by vncleane thoughtes and delites As thou here hast sperd God out of thine hert so he shall spere thee out of heauen Thou hast herberwid the meine of the fiend and with them in hell thou shall thou shalt euer abide woe also for sinne of speach for thou might nought open they foule and stynkyng mouth with the whiche thou hast spoken vnhonesty cursyng fraude deceite leasinges forswearyng scornyng and backebityng to prayse God in the felowshyp of Saintes For louyng is nought comynlych in mouthes of sinners For in the whiche gif thou haddest kept thy mouth cleane thou shouldest haue songen in felowshyp of Aungels this blessed song Sanctus Sanctus Sanctus Domenus Deus omnipotens Holy holy holy Lord God almighty Than yellyng and weepyng thou shalt cry in company of deuils Ve Ge Ge quante sunt tenebrae Woe woe wo how great beth these darkenes wo also for sinne of deede Thou hast bene proud thy pryde shall be drawen to hell as Esay sayth or thou hast bene brent wyth enuye of the deuill Enuy entred into the world and they shoulden folowen him that ben on hys syde as Salomon sayth Or thou hast be stirred with wrath and euerich man that beareth wrath to hys brethren is gilty in dome as Christ in the Gospell sayth of Mathew Or thou hast be slowe to good deedes myssawe shall come to thee as a wayfaring man and thy pouert as a man iarmed as the booke of Prouerbes sayth Or thou hast haunted lechery glotonye or couetise That forsoth wete ye that euerych auouterer or vncleane man that is a gloton other chynch shall neuer haue heritage in the Realme of Christ and of God as Poule sayth But fire brimstone and the spirit of tempests that is the fiend of hell shulen be a partie of their payne as it is written in the Psaulter when these damned men bee in this woe they shulen syng thys reufull song that is ywritten in the booke of mourning The ioye of our hart is a go our quier is turned into wo the crowne of our heade is fallen vs fro Alas for synne that we haue do But ioye and ioye and ioye to them that be saued Ioy in God ioy in them selfe ioy in other that ben saued Also ioy for theyr trauayle is brought to so gracious an end Ioy for they scaped the payne of hell ioy fore theyr blisse that they han in the sight of God Cui sit honor gloria in secula seculorum Amen And thus much concerning this worthie and fruitfull Sermon whych as by the auncienines of the phrase seemeth to be preached much about the time of Iohn Wicklesse so I thought heere by the occasion of William Thorpes examination best to place the same for the apt coherence both of the spirit and of the matter Especially hauing before our eyes the publique vtilitie of the Reader to whome by the studious reading thereof might rise plentifull matter of true Christian information both of the wholesome fearing of God and of the right guiding of euery Christian mans life Wherevnto I thought good to anexe further in our story after the examination of William Thorpe and the martyrdome of William Sawtrey and of Iohn Badby thus described as ye haue heard which was about the yeare 1409. By the way here is to be considered at least to be admonished that al this while the schisme in the church of Rome did yet continue and so endured till the councell of Constance which was in whole the space of xxix yeres The origine whereof as was sayd page 000. first began at Urbanus 5. which Urbanus being dead an 1389. next folowed Pope Boniface the 9. who sate 14. yeares He in selling his pardons was so impudent and so past shame that he brought the keyes of Peter as sayth Platina in contempt After hym succeeded Innocentius 7. and sate 2. yeares who being dead the Cardinals consulting together and seeing the foule enormitie and inconuenience growing vpon this contentious schisme in their Church of Rome minding to prouide some remedie for the same after the best deuise they could in their conclaue where they were assembled for a new election of the Pope tooke this order promising among themselues with solemne vow made to God to Mary the blessed virgine to Peter and Paule and to all the blessed company of saints That if any of them within the colledge or without the colledge should be called to that high place of Apostolicall preeminence he should effectuously renounce the iurisdiction and title of his Popedome if or whensoeuer the cōtrary Pope for the time being would in like maner renounce his place and title and his Cardinals in like maner to cōdescend to the other Cardinals of Rome So that both these two colledges of Cardinals agreeing together one chiefe byshop might be chosen and takē out of them both to be made the true Pope Prouided moreouer that none should seeke any releasement or absolution from the sayd promise vow and bond once passed among them Unto al which things furthermore euery one subscribed with his hande These things thus prefixed and ratified vpon the same they proceeded to the election In whych was chosen Gregorius the xii who the same day of hys election in the presence of all the cardinals confirmed the vow sacrament and promise made subscribing the same with his hand in forme as followeth And I Gregorie thys day being the last of Nouember in the yeare of our Lorde 1407. chosen and elected for bishop of Rome do sweare vowe and promise confirme all the premisses aboue contained c. Thys being done shortly after he was crowned being of the age of 80. yeares As
of sinnes the vprising of the flesh and euerlasting life Amen And for a more large declaration sayth he of thys my sayth in the Catholicke Churche I stedfastly beleue that there is but one God almighty in and of whose Godhead are these three persons the father the sonne and the holye Ghost and that those three persons are the selfe same God almighty I beleue also that the second person of this most blessed Trinitie in most conuenient tune appoynted therunto afore tooke flesh and bloud of the most blessed virgin Mary for the sauegarde and redemption of the vniuersall kind of man which was afore lost in Adams offence Moreouer I beleeue that the same Iesus Christ our Lord thus being both God and man is the onely head of the whole Christian Churche and that all those that hathe bene or shal be saued be members of this most holy church And this holy Churche I thinke to be deuided into three sortes or companyes Wherof the first sort be now in heauen and they are the sayntes from hence departed These as they were here cōuersant conformed alwayes their liues to the most holye lawes and pure examples of Christ renouncing Sathan the world and the flesh with all their concupiscences and euils The second sort are in Purgatory if any suche place be in the scriptures abiding the mercy of God and a full deliueraunce of payne The third sort are here vpon the earth and be called the Church millitant For day and night they contend against crafty assaultes of the deuill the flattering prosperities of this world and the rebellious filthines of the flesh This latter congregation by the iust ordinance of God is also seuered into three diuers estates that is to say into priesthood knighthood and the commons Among whom the will of God is that the one should ayd the other but not destroy the other The priestes first of al secluded from all worldlines should conforme theyr liues vtterly to the examples of Christ and his Apostles Euermore shoulde they be occupyed in preaching and teaching the scriptures purely and in geuing wholesome examples of good liuing to the other two degrees of men More modest also more louing gentle and lowly in spirite should they be then ano other sortes of people In knighthood are all they which beare sword by law of office These should defend Gods lawes and see that the Gospell were purely taught conforming theyr liues to that same and secluding all false preachers yea these ought rather to hazard their liues thē to suffer such wicked decrees as either blemisheth the eternall Testament of God or yet letteth the free passage therof whereby heresies schismes might spring in the Churche For of none other arise they as I suppose then of erroneous constitutiōs craftely first creeping in vnder hipocriticall lies for aduauntage They ought also to preserue Gods people from oppressours tyrauntes and theeues to see the clergie supported so long as they teach purely pray rightly and minister the Sacramentes freely And if they see them doe otherwise they are bound by the law of office to compell them to chaung their doinges to see all thinges performed according to gods prescript ordinaunce The latter fellowship of this Church are the common people whose duery is to beare their good mindes true obedience to the aforesayd ministers of God theyr kinges ciuill gouernours and Priestes The right office of these is iustly to occupy euery man his facultie be it marchaundise handicraft or the tilthe of the ground And so one of them to be as an helper to an other following alwayes in their sortes the iust commaundementes of the Lord God Ouer and besidés all this I most faythfully beleeue the the Sacramentes of Christes Churche are necessary to all Christen beleuers this alwayes seen to that they be truly ministred according to Christes first institution and ordinaunce And forasmuch as I am maliciously most falsly accused of a misbeliefe in the sacrament of the aulter to the hurtfull slaunder of many I signifie here vnto all men that this is my fayth concerning that I beleue in that Sacrament to be contayned very Christes body and bloud vnder the similitudes of bread and wyne yea the same body that was conceiued of the holy ghost borne of that virgine Mary done on the crosse dyed that was buryed arose the thyrd day from the death and is now glorified in heauen I also beleue the vniuersall law of God to be most true and perfect and they which doe not so follow it in theyr fayth and works at one time or an other can neuer be saned Where as he that seketh it in fayth accepteth it learneth it delighteth therin and performeth it in loue shall cast for it the felicitie of euerlasting Innocencie Finally this is my fayth also that God will aske no more of a Christen beleuer in this life but onely to obey that preceptes of that most blessed law If any Prelates of the Church require more or els any other kinde of obedience then this to be vsed he contemneth Christ exalting hymselfe aboue God and so becommeth an open Antichrist Al the premisses I beleue particularly and generally all that God hath left in his holy scripture that I should beleeue Instantly desiring you my siege Lord and most worthye king that this confession of mine may be iustly examined by the most godly wise and learned men of your Realme And if it be found in all pointes agreeing to the veritie thē let it be so allowed and I therupon holden for none other then a true Christian. If it be proued otherwise then let it be vtterly cōdemned prouided alwayes that I be taught a better beliefe by the word of God and I shall most reuerently at all times obey therunto This briefe confession of this fayth the Lorde Cobham wrote as is mentioned afore and so tooke it with him to the court offering it withall meekenes vnto the kyng to read it ouer The king would in no case receaue it but cōmanded it to be deliuered vnto thē that should be his iudges Then desired he in the kinges presence that an hundred knightes and Esquiers might be suffered to come in vpon hys purgation which he knew woulde cleare hym of all heresies Moreouer he offered himsel●e after the lawe of armes to fight for life or death in any man liuing Christen or heathen in the quarrell of hys fayth the king and the Lordes of hys Councell excepted Finally with all gētlenes he protested before all that were present that he wold refuse no maner of correction that shold after the lawes of God he ministred vnto him but that he would at al times with all meekenes obey it Notwithstanding all this the king suffered him to be sommoned personally in his owne priuy chamber Then sayd the Lord Cobham to the king that he had appeled from the
rule the Church the which shoulde be alwayes conuersant with the militant Church The aunswere I do graunt it For what consequent is this The king of Boheme is head of the kingdome of Boheme Ergo the Pope is head of the whole militant Church Christ is the head of the spiritualtye ruling and gouerning the militant Church by much more and greater necessity then Cesar ought to rule the tēporalty For so much as Christ which sitteth on the ryght hand of God the Father doth necessaryly rule the militant Church as head And there is no sparke of apparance that there should be one head in the spiritualty ruling the church that should alwaies be conuersant with the militant churche except some infidell would heretically affirme that the militant Church should haue here a permanent and continuall Citty or dwelling place and not to enquire and seeke after that which is to come It is also further euident in my booke how vnconsequent the proportion of the similitude is for a reprobate Pope to be the head of the militent church and a reprobate king to be the head of the kingdome of Boheme The 4. Article Christ would better rule his Churche by his true Apostles dispersed through out the whole world without such monstrous heades I aunswere that it is in my booke as here foloweth that albeit that the doctor doth say that the body of the militant Church is oftentimes without a head yet notwithstanding we do verelye beleue that Christ Iesus is the head ouer euery Churche ruling the same without lacke or default pouring vpō the same a continuall motion and sence euen vnto the latter day neither can the doctor geue a reason why the Churche in the time of Agnes by the space of 2. yeares and 5. monethes liuing according to many members of christ in grace and fauour but that by the same reason the Church might be without a head by the space of many yeares For so much as Christ should better rule his Church by his true disciples dispersed throughout the whole world without suche monstrous heads Then sayd they all together Beholde now he prophecieth and Iohn Hus prosecuting his former talke sayd but I say that the Church in the time of the Apostles was farre better ruled and gouerned then now is And what doth let or hinder that christ should not now also rule the same better by his true Disciples without such monstrous heades as haue bene now a late For beholde euen at this present we haue no such head And yet Christ ceaseth not to rule his Church when be had spoken these wordes he was derided and mocked The 5. Article Peter was no vniuersall Pastour or shepheard of the sheepe of Christ much lesse is the Byshop of Rome The answere These words are not in my book but those which do follow Secondly it appeareth by the wordes of Christ that he did not limit vnto Peter for his iurisdiction the whole world no not one onely prouince So likewise neither vnto any other of the Apostles Notwithstanding certayne of them walked through many regions and other some fewer preaching and teaching the kingdome of God as Paule which laboured trauelled more then all the rest did corporally visite and conuert most prouinces whereby it is lawfull for any Apostle or his vicar to conuert and confirme as much people or as many prouinces in the fayth of Christ as they are able neither is there any restraynt of their liberty or iurisdiction But only by disability or insufficiency The 6. Article The Apostles and other faythfull priestes of the Lord haue stoutly ruled the Church in al things necessary vnto saluation before the office of the Pope was brought in to the Church and so would they very possibly doe still if there were no Pope euen vnto the latter day Then they all cryed out agayne and sayd Behold the prophet but Iohn Hus sayde verely it is true that the Apostles did rule the Churche stoutly before the office of the Pope was brought into the Churche And certaynely a great deale better then it is now ruled And likewise may other faythfull men which doe follow their steppes doe the same for as now we haue no Pope and so peraduenture it may continue and endure a yeare or more Besides this were brought agaynst him other 19. articles obiected vnto him being in prison which with his answeres to the same here likewise follow Of the whiche Articles the first is thys The first Article Paule according vnto present iustice was a blasphemer and none of the Church and therwithall was in grace according vnto predestination of life euer lasting The aunswere This proposition is not in the booke but this which foloweth whereby it doth seme probable that as Paule was both a blasphemer accordyng to present iustice and therewithall also was a faythfull childe of our holy mother the Church and in grace accordyng to predestination of life euerlasting So Iscariot was both in grace according vnto present iustice and was neuer of our holy mother the Church according to the predestination of life euerlasting for so much as he lacked that predestination And so Iscariot albeit he was an Apostle and a Byshop of Christ which is the name of his office yet was he neuer no part of the vniuersall Church The 2. Article Christ doth more loue a predestinate man being sinnefull then any reprobate in what grace possible soeuer he be The aunswere My wordes are in the 4. chapter of my booke intituled of the Church and it is euident that God doth more loue any predestinate beynge sinnefull then any reprobate in what grace so euer he be for the time for so much as he will that the predestinate shall haue perpetuall blessednesse and the reprobate to haue eternall fire Wherefore God partly infinitely louing them both as his creatures yet he doth more loue the predestinate because he geueth him greater grace or a greater gift that is to say life euerlasting which is greater more excellent then onely grace according vnto present iustice And the third Article of those Articles before soundeth much neare vnto this that the predestinate cannot fall frō grace for they haue a certayne radicall grace rooted in thē although they be depriued of the aboundant grace for a time These thinges are true in the compound sence The 3. Article All the sinnefull according vnto present iniustice are not faythfull but doe swerue from the true Catholicke fayth for so much as it is impossible that any man can committee any deadly sinne but in that point that he doe swerue from the fayth The aunswere I acknowledge that sentence to be mine and it appeareth that if they did thinke vpon the punishment which is to be laid vpon sinners and did fully beleue and had the fayth of the diuine knowledge and vnderstanding c. then vndoubtedly they would not so offend and sinne This proposition is verified by the sayinge of
and bondes for the worde of God ¶ Another letter of Iohn Hus. IOhn Husse in hope the seruant of God to all the faithfull at Boheme which loue the Lord wisheth to stand and die in the grace of God and at last to attaine to eternall life Amen Ye that beare rule ouer other and be rich and ye also that be poore well be loued and faithfull in God I beseeche you and admonish you all that ye will be obedient vnto God make muche of his worde and gladly hearing the same will humbly perfourme that which yee heare I beseeche you sticke fast to the veritie of Gods worde which I haue written and preached vnto you out of his lawe and the Sermons of his Saintes Also I desire you if any man either in publicke Sermon or in priuate talke heard of me any thing or haue read any thing written by me which is againste the verity of God that he do not follow the same Albeit I do not finde my conscience guiltie that I euer haue spoken or wrytten any such thing amongst you I desire you moreouer if any man at any time haue noted any leuitie either in my talke or in my conditions that he doe not follow the same but pray to God for me to pardon me that sinne of lightnes I pray you that ye wil loue your priests and ministers which be of honest behauiour to prefer and honor them before others namely such priests as trauaile in the worde of God I pray you take hede to your selues and beware of malitious and deceitful men and especially of these wicked priests of whom our Sauiour doth speake that they are vnder shepes clothing inwardly are rauening wolues I pray suche as be rulers superiors to behaue them selues gently towardes their poore inferiours and to rule them iustly I beseche the citizens that they will walke euery man in his degree and vocation with an vpright conscience The Artificers also I beseeche that they will exercise their occupations diligently and vse them with the feare of God I beseeche the seruauntes that they wil serue their maisters faithfully And likewise the scholemaisters I beseeche that they liuing honestly will bryng vp their Scholers vertuously and to teach them faythfully First to learne to feare GOD then for the glory of GOD and the publicke vtilitie of the common wealth and their owne health and not for auarice or for worldly honor to employ their myndes to honest Artes. I beseech the Studentes of the Vniuersitie and all Scholes in all honest thynges to obey their Maisters and to follow them and that with all diligence they will study to be profitable both to the settyng foorth of the glory of God and to the soules health as well of themselues as of other men Together I beseech and pray you all that you will yeld most harty thankes to the right honorable Lordes the Lord Wencelaus de Duba Lord Iohn de Clum Lord Henry Lumlouio Lord Vilem Zagecio Lord Nicholas and other Lordes of Boheme of Morauia and Polony that their diligence towardes me may bee gratefull to all good men because that they like valiaunt champions of Gods trueth haue oftentymes set themselues agaynst the whole Councell for my deliueraunce contendyng and standyng agaynst the same to the vttermost of their power but especially Lord Wencelaus de Duba and Lord Iohn de Clum What so euer they shall report vnto you geue credite vnto them for they were in the Councell when I there aunswered many They know who they were of Bohemia and how many false and slaunderous thynges they brought in agaynst me and that Councell cryed out agaynst me and how I also aunswered to all thynges wherof I was demaunded I beseech you also that ye will pray for the kyng of Romaines and for your kyng and for his wife your Queene that God of his mercy would abide with thē and with you both now and henceforth in euerlastyng life Amen This Epistle I haue writtē to you out of prison and in bandes lookyng the next day after the writyng hereof for the sentence of the Councell vpon my death hauyng a full trust that he will not leaue me neither suffer me to deny his truth and to reuoke the errours whiche false witnesses maliciously haue deuised agaynst me How mercyfully the Lord GOD hath dealt with me and was with me in maruailous temptations ye shall know when as hereafter by the helpe of Christ we shall all meete together in the ioye of the world to come As concernyng M. Hierome my dearely beloued brother and fellow I heare no other but that he is remayning in straight bandes lookyng for death as I doe and that for the fayth which he valiauntly mainteyned amongest the Bohemians our cruell enemies of Boheme haue geuen vs into the power and handes of other enemies and into bandes I beseech you pray to God for them Moreouer I beseech you namely you of Prage that we will loue the temple of Bethleem and prouide so long as God shall permit that the word of God may be preached in the same For because of that place the Deuill is angry and agaynst the same place he hath stirred vp Priestes and Canons perceiuyng that in that place his kyngdome should be disturbed and diminished I trust in GOD that he will keepe that holy Church so long as it shall please him and in the same shall geue greater encrease of his worde by other then he hath done by me a weake vessell I beseech you also that ye will loue together and withholdyng no man from the hearyng of Gods word ye will prouide and take care that good men be not oppressed by any force and violence Written at Constance the yeare of our Lord. 1415. ¶ An other right godly letter of Iohn Hus to a certaine priest admonishing him of his office and exhorting him to be faithfull worthy to be red of all Ministers THe peace of our Lorde Iesus Christ. c. My deare brother be diligent in preaching the Gospel and do the worke of a good Euangelist neglect not your vocation labour like a blessed souldiour of Christ. First liue godly and holily Secondly teach faithfully and truely Thirdly be an example to other in well doing that you be not reprehended in your sayings correct vice and set foorth vertue To euill liuers threaten eternall punishmēt but to those that be faithfull and godly set forth the comforts of eternall ioy Preach cōtinually but be short and fruitfull prudētly vnderstanding discretly dispēsing the holy Scriptures Neuer affirme or maintaine those things that be vncertaine and doubtfull least that your aduersaries take holde vpon you which reioyce in deprauing their brethren whereby they may bring the ministers of God into contempt Exhort men to the confession of their faith and to the communion of both kindes both of the body bloud of Christ wherby such as do repent earnestly of their sinnes may the more often come to
thy names sake Amen Written in prison and in bondes in the Vigill of holy S. Iohn the Baptist who beyng in prison and in bondes for the rebuking of wickednesse was beheaded ¶ Among diuers other letters of Iohn Hus which he wrote to the great consolation of others I thought also here to intermixt an other certaine godly letter writtē out of England by a faythfull Scholler of Wickleffe as appeareth vnto Iohn Hus and the Bohemians which for the zealous affectiō therein cōteined seemeth not vnworthy to be read ¶ A letter to Iohn Hus and to the Bohemians from London GReetyng and whatsoeuer can be deuised more sweete in the bowels of Christ Iesu. My dearely beloued in the Lord whom I loue in the trueth and not I onely but also all they that haue the knowledge of the trueth whiche abydeth in you and shall be with you through the grace of GOD for euermore I reioysed aboue measure when our beloued brethren came and gaue testimony vnto vs of your trueth and how you walke in the trueth I haue heard brethren how sharpely Antichrist persecuteth you in vexyng the faithfull seruauntes of Christ with diuers and straunge kyndes of afflictions And surely no maruaile if amongest you since it is so almost all the world ouer the law of Christ be too too greuously impugned and that redde Dragon hauyng so many heades of whom it is spoken in the Apocalyps haue now vomited out of his mouth that great floud by whiche he goeth about to swallow vp the woman but the most gracious God will deliuer for euer his onely and most faythfull spouse Let vs therfore cofort our selues in the Lord our God and in his vnmeasurable goodnes hopyng strongly in him which will not suffer those that loue him to be vnmercifully defrauded of any their purpose if we according to our duety shall loue him with all our hart for aduersitie should by no meanes preuaile ouer vs if there were no iniquitie raignyng in vs. Let therefore no tribulation or sorrow for Christs cause discourage vs knowing this for a surety that whosoeuer the Lord vouchsafeth to receaue to be his childrē those he scourgeth For so the mercifull father will haue them tried in this miserable life by persecutions that afterwardes hee may spare them For the golde that this high artificer hathe chosen he purgeth and trieth in this fire that he may afterwardes lay it vp in his pure treasurie For we see that the time which we shall abide here is short and transitory the life which we hope for after this is blessed and euerlasting Therefore whilest we haue time let vs take paine that we may enter into that rest What other thyng do we see in this brickle life then sorow heauinesse and sadnesse and that which is most greuous of all to the faithfull too much abusing and contempt of the lawe of the Lord. Let vs therefore endeuoure our selues as much as we may to lay holde of the things that are eternall and abiding despising in our mindes all transitory and fraile things Let vs consider the holy fellowship of our fathers that haue gone before vs. Let vs consider the Saincts of the olde and newe Testament Did they not passe through this sea of tribulation and persecution were not some of them cut in peces other some stoned others of them killed with the sword Some others of them went about in pelts and goates skinnes as the Apostle to the Hebrues witnesseth Surely they all walked straight wayes following the steppes of Christ which sayde he that ministreth vnto me let him follow me whether so euer I go c. Therfore let vs also which haue so noble examples geuen vs of the Saintes that went before vs laying away as muche as in vs lyeth the heauy burden and the yoke of sinne which compasseth vs about runne forwarde through patience to the battaile that is set before vs fixing our eyes vppon the author of faith and Iesus the finisher of the same who seeing the ioy that was set before hym suffred the paines of the crosse despising death Let vs call vppon him which suffred suche reproche against himselfe of sinners that we be not wearied fainting in our hearts but that we may heartely pray for helpe of the Lorde and may fight against his aduersary Antichrist that we may loue his law and not be deceitfull labourers but that we may deale faithfully in all things according to that that God hath vouchsafed to geue vs and that wee may labour diligently in the Lordes cause vnder hope of an euerlasting reward Behold therefore brother Hus most dea●ly beloued in Christe although in face vnknowen to me yet not in faith and loue for distance of places cannot separate those whom the loue of Christ doth effectually knit together be comforted in the grace which is geuen vnto thee labour like a good souldiour of Christ Iesus preach be instant in word and in example and call as many as thou canst to the way of truth for the truth of the gospel is not to be kept in silence because of friuolous censures and thunderboltes of Antichrist And therefore to the vttermost of thy power strengthen thou and confirme the members of Christ whych are weakened by the deuil and if the Lord wil vouchsafe it Antichrist shall shortly come to an end And there is one thing wherein I do greatly reioyce that in your realm and in other places God hath stirred vp the harts of some men that they can gladly suffer for the word of God imprisonment banishment and death Further beloued I knowe not what to wryte vnto you but I confesse that I could wish to powre out my whole heart if thereby I might comfort you in the lawe of the Lorde Also I salute from the bottome of my heart all the faithfull louers of the law of the Lord and specially Iacobellus your coadiutor in the gospell requiring that he will pray vnto the Lorde for me in the Vniuersall churche of Iesus Christ. And the God of peace which hath raised from the dead the shepheard of the sheepe the mighty Lorde Iesus Christ make you apt in all goodnesse to doe his will working in you that which may be pleasant in his sight All your friendes salute you which haue heard of your constancie I would desire also to see your letters wrytten backe to vs for knowe yee that they shall greatly comfort vs. At London by your seruaunt desiring to be fellow with you in your labors Ricus Wiceewitze priest vnworthy ¶ An other letter of Iohn Hus to his friendes of Boheme THe Lord God be with you I loue the counsaile of the Lorde aboue gold and precious stone Wherfore I trust in the mercy of Iesus Christ that he wil geue me his spirit to stand in his truth Pray to the Lord for the spirit is ready and the flesh is weake The Lord almighty be the eternal reward vnto my Lords which constantly firmely and
neyther holy neither meritorious Item that reliques as dead mens bones ought not to be worshipped or digged out of theyr graues or set vp in Shrynes Item that prayers made in all places are acceptable vnto God Item that men ought not to pray to any saynt but only to God Item that the vels and ringing in the church was ordeyned for no other purpose then to fill the pristes purses Item that it is no sinne to withstand the ecclesiasticall preceptes Item that the catholick church is onely the congregation of the elect These were the Articles which were generally obiected agaynst them all wherin they did so agree in one vniforme sayth that whatsoeuer one did hold all the other did mayntayne hold the same By the which theyr consent doctrine it appeareth that they all receiued it of some one instructor who was William White which being a scholer and folower of I. Wickliffe resorted afterward into thys country of Norfolke and there instructed these men in the light of the gospell And now as we haue declared the names and Articles of these good men so it remayneth somewhat to speake of theyr troubles how they were handled beginning first with William White ¶ William White Priest THis William White being a folower of Iohn Wickliff and a priest not after the common sort of priests but rather to be reputed amongst the number of them of whom the wise man speaketh He was as the morning starre in the midst of a cloud c. This man was well learned vpright a well spoken priest He gaue ouer his priesthood benefice took vnto him a godly yong woman to his wife named Ioane notwithstanding he did not therefore cease or leaue frō his former office duty but continually labored to the glory and prayse of his spouse Christ by reading writing preaching The principal points of his doctrine were these which he was forced to recant at Canterbury That men should seeke for the forgeuenes of their sins onely at the handes of God That the wicked liuing of the Pope and his holynesse is nothing els but a deuilish estate and heauy yoke of Antichrist and therfore he is an enemy vnto Christes trueth That men ought not to worship Images or other Idolatrous payntings That mē ought not to worship the holy men which are dead That the Romish church is the fig tree which the Lord Christ hath accussed because it hath brought forth no fruit of the true beliefe That such as weare coules or be annointed or shorne are the lanceknightes and souldiors of Lucifer that they all because theyr lamps are not burning shall be shut out when as the Lord Christ shall come Upon which articles he being attached at Cant. vnder the Archb. Henry Chichesley in the yeare of our Lord 1424. there for a certayne space stoutly and manly witnessed the truth whiche he had preached but like as there he lost hys courage and strength so afterward he became again much more stouter and stronger in Iesu Christ and confessed his own error offence For after this he going into Norfolk with his said wife Ioane there occupying himself busily in teaching conuerting the people vnto the true doctrine of Christ at the last by meanes of the kings letters sēt down for that intent and purpose he was apprehended taken brought before Wil. bishop of Norwich by whom he was conuict condemned of 30. articles there was burned in Norwich in the moneth of September an 1424. ¶ The burning of William White This William White and his wife had his most abode with one Tho. Moone of Ludney This mā was of so deuout and holy life that all the people had him in great reuerence and desired him to pray for them in so much that one Margaret Wright confessed that if any sayntes were to be prayd to she would rather pray to him then to any other When he was come vnto the stake thinking to open hys mouth to speak vnto the people to exhort confirme them in the verity one of the bishops seruants stroke hym on the mouth therby to force him to keepe silence And thus thys good man receiuing the crowne of martyrdome ended this mortall life to the great dolor griefe of all the good men of Norfolke Whose sayd wife Ioane folowing her husbāds footsteps according to her power teaching and sowing abroad the same doctrine confirmed many men in Gods truth wherefore the suffered much trouble and punishmēt the same yeare at the handes of the sayd bishop About the same time also was burned father Abraham of Colchester and Iob. Waddō priest for the like articles Concerning them which abiured how by whom they were examined What depositions came in agaynst them and what was the order maner of the penance inioyned them here it might be set out at large but for auoyding of prolixity it shall be sufficient briefly to touch certaine of the principals wherby the better vnderstanding may be geuē to the Reader after what maner order al the other were intreated First amongst them which were arested and caused to abiure in this yeare afore specified 1428. was Thom. Pye and Iohn Mendham of Aldborough who being conuict vpon diuers of the Articles before mentioned were enioined penance to be done in theyr own parish Church as by the bishops letter directed to the Deane of Rhodenhall that parish priest of Aldborough doth more at large appeare the tenour wherof here ensueth The copy of the Bishop of Norwich his letter WIlliam by the sufferance of God Bishop of Norwich to our welbeloued sonnes in Christ the Deane of Rodéhal of our Dioces and to the parishe priest of the parish Churche of Aldborough of the same our dioces health grace and benediction For so much as we according to our office lawefully proceeding to the correction and amendment of the soules of Thomas Pye and Iohn Mendham of Aldborough of the dioces aforesayd because they haue holden beleued and affirmed diuers and many errours and heresyes contrary to the determination of the holy Churche of Rome and the vniuersall church and catholicke fayth haue enioyned the sayd Thomas and Iohn appearing before vs personally and confessing before vs iudicially that they haue holden beleued and affirmed diuers and many errors and heresyes this penaunce hereunder written for theyr offences to be done and fulfilled in maner forme and time hereunder written according as iustice doth require that is to say sixe fustigations or displinges about the parish church of Alborough aforesayd before a solemn procession sixe seuerall sondayes and three displinges about the market place of Herelston of our sayde Dioces three principall market dayes bare necked head legs and feet theyr bodyes being couered onely with theyr shyrtes and breeches either of them carying a taper in his hand of a pound waight as well rounde about the Church as about the market
with the infernall Gods but I most reuerend fathers do not inuite you vnto the infernals as he did his Lacedemonians but vnto the celestiall and euerlasting ioyes of Paradise if that you can suffer death for the truthes sake and paciently abide the threatnings of these princes if there be any threatninges at all I call you vnto that eternal glory where as there is no alteration of state nothing decayeth or fadeth where all good and perpetuall things do abound wheras no man wanteth no man enuyeth an other no man stealeth frō an other no man violently taketh frō an other no man banisheth no man murdereth and finally no man dyeth Where as all men are blessed and happy all are of one minde one accord all are immortall all are of lyke estate that all men haue euery man hath that euery mā hath all men haue Which thinges if we will consider we shall truely answere Panormitan as Theodorus Cyrensis is said to haue answered Lismachus the king whē he threatned to hang hym who sayd I pray you threaten these horrible thinges vnto your Courtiers as for Theodorus it maketh no matter whether he rotte aboue the grounde or vnder the ground So likewise let vs aunswere vnto the princes if there be anye that do threaten vs and let vs not feare their tormentes What doth a longer life preuayle to help vs No man hath liued to short a tyme which hath obtained the perfect gift of vertue And if the death which a man suffereth in the quarrell of his country seemeth not onely to be glorious amongst the Rhetoricians but also happy blessed what shall we say for these deathes whiche are sustayned for the country of all countryes the Church Truely most reuerend fathers it is to muche that our aduersaries doe perswade themselues of you for they iudge you feareful sluggish and faynt harted and therefore they do obiect Princes vnto you because they thinke that you wil not suffer hunger thyrst exile in the quarrell detence of the church But I thinke you will esteeme it no hard matter for the obteyning of euerlasting lyfe to do the same which shipmen do for the obteyning of transitory riches to put themselues in danger of the sea wind and suffer most cruell stormes The hunters lye abroad in the nightes in the snowe in the hilles and woodes are tormented with cold yet haue they none other reward but some wilde beast of no value or prise I pray you what ought you then to doe whose reward shal be Paradise I am ashamed of our ignauie whē as I read that women yea euen yong maydens haue violently obtayned heauen through their Martyrdome and we are made afrayd onely with the name of death Thys riuer of Rhein which runneth along by the cittie in tymes past hath caryed 11. thousand virgines vnto Martyrdome In India as Cicero writeth whē any mā was dead hys wiues for there they had many wiues came not into contention who shuld be burned with him and she whom he loued best hauing vanquished the other all the rest ioyfully folowing her was cast into the fire with the dead Carcase of her husband and burnt The other whiche were ouercome departed full of heauines and sorow wishing rather to haue dyed then liue The which courage we now taking vpon vs for Christes sake will aunswere Panormitan euen as the Lacedemonians aunswered Phillip who when as by his letters he threatned them that he would stop all that whiche they went about they asked him whether he would also let thē to dye Therfore as you are excellent men so vse your vertue which is alway free and remayneth alwayes inuincible For you do know that power is geuē you of the Lord and strength from the most highest who will take accompt of your workes and examine your thoughtes vnto whom ye should be carefull to render a good accompt iudgyng rightly and keeping the lawe of righteousnesse and in all thinges walking according to the will of God And not according to the will of men And whereas the Embassadours of Eugenius doe openly preach and declare a new doctrine extolling the byshop of Rome aboue the vniuersall church to the end that ignorant soules be not snared ye shall not cease or leaue to publish the three first conclusions following the example of the Apostle Paul which would in no point geue place vnto Peter when he walked not according to the Gospel As for the other matters which doe respect the only person of Eugenius because Panormitan and the other Ambassadours of the princes shall not say that we doe passe oure bonds ye shall deferre them for this present When as Cardinall Arelatensis had made an ende of his Oration there was a great noyse crying out brawling euery where The Presidents cōmaundements were not regarded neither was the accustmed order obserued for sometimes they spake vnto Panormitan sometime vnto Lodouicus no man was suffered to speake but in haste the bishops brawled with byshops and the inferiours with theyr fellowes All was full of contention debate which when as Lodouicus the Patriarck of Aquileia perceiued a man of no lesse courage and stomacke then of nobillitie and byrth being also a Duke for the zeale whiche he bare vnto the vniuersall church turning himselfe vnto Panormita● Lodouicus the Prothonotary sayd Do not think the matter shall so passe you know not yet the maners of the Germaynes for if you go forward on this fashion it wil not be lawfull for you to depart out of this country wyth whole heades With which wordes Panormitan Lodouicus and the Archbishop of Millaine being striken as it were with lightning from heauen rose vp sayd Is our libertie thus taken from vs What meaneth it that the patriarcke doth threaten vs that our heades shoulde be broken And turning themselues vnto Iohn Earle of Dierstene which then supplied the protectors place they demāded of him whether he would defend the Councel and preserue al men in their libertie or no. The Citizens also and Senators were present to prouide and foresee that no offence shoulde rise for the Cittizens obserued alwayes this order that they would be present in all affayres which they supposed would breede dissension foreseeing specially that no tumultes shold ryse otherwise then with wordes They vsed alwayes suche a marueilous foresight prouidence that no man vnto this day could haue any cause agaynst them to complayne for violating their promise Wherefore if at any time any citizens haue deserued wel at the hands of the churche surely this prayse is to be geuen vnto the Basilians These men together with Iohn Earle of Dierstene being present in the assembly of the fathers gaue a signe of preseruatiō of their libertie The Earle albeit he was moued at the strangenes of the matter for he would not haue thought so great contētions could haue risen amongst wise mē answered
him if good councellours had bene aboute him if all they which did accuse and molest him had not bene de via realium as Thomistes that is of the sect of Thomas which Thomists were set at that time against the other sect of the seculars which were called Nominales and therfore they so spited this Doctour because he did not hold with their Thomas against whome otherwise had it not ben for that cause they would neuer haue ben so fierce and malitious in proceding against him I take God to witnesse which knoweth all things that this processe which was made against him for his reuoking burning of his bookes did greatly displease M. Engeline of Brunswick a great diuine and also M. Iohn Reisersberge being both learned and famous men but namely M. Engeline thought that too much malice and rashnesse was shewed in handling of that same man and did not feare to say that many of his articles and the greater part thereof might be holden well inough and greatly blamed the mad and phantasticall dissention of the Thomists seeking by all maner of wayes how to get the triumph ouer the seculare deuines c. Haec ille Although thys aged and feble old man by weakenesse was constrained to geue ouer vnto the Romish clergy by outward profession of his mouth yet notwithstāding his opinions and doctrine declared his inward heart of what iudgement he was if feare of death present had not otherwise enforsed him to say then hee did thinke Agayne although he had reuoked after their minds yet we reade no such fourme of recantation to be prescribed to hym to read opēly vnto the people as the vse is here in England The story of this man is more fully to be found in the bokes of Orth. Gratius c. As touching the raigne of this Fredericke Emperor seeing we haue comprehēded hetherto sufficiently the most principal matters in his time incurrent we wil now passe forwarde the Lorde guiding vs to Maximilian after I haue first geuen a briefe memorandum of 3. valiant Princes and Captaines florishing in the same time of thys Fredericke in Germaine Of the whych was one Albert Duke of Saxonie who for his renoumed and famous acts was called by publique voyce Dextera manus Imperij The ryght hande of the Empire The other was Albert Marques of Brandenburge to whome also the name was attribute named of Pope Pius to be Achilles Germanicus The third was Fredericke Earle Palatine surnamed Victoriosus who manfully defended the fredome and maiesty of the Empire from the fraudulent oppressions of the popes tirāny In the yeare of our Lorde 1484. in this Emperours time dyed Pope Sixtus the 4. a little before touched a monster rather of nature then a prelate of the Church Of him writeth Platina that vniustly he vexed al Italy with warre and dissension Agrippa writing of hym sayeth that among all the bawdes of these other latter dayes whych were builders of brothelhouses this Pope Sixtus 4. surmounted all other who at Rome erected a stewes of double abhomination not onely of wemen but also c. wherupon no small gaine redounded to his coffers For euery suche common harlot in Rome paide to him a Iuly peece the sumnie wherof grew in the yere some while to 20000. at length to xl M. duckets Wherunto accordeth right wel the Epitaphe of Iohn Sapidus which in the ende heere of we will annexe Iohn Carion also speaking of this Bishop witnesseth him to be a man rather borne to warre then to Religion For hee warred against Uitellius Tiphernates agaynst the Florentines the Uenecians whome he excommunicated and did not absolue till hee died also against Columnenses against Ferdinandus king of Apulia and Duke of Calabria also against other nations and Princes moe Ex Ioan. Laziardo Of the sayde Pope it is recorded that he was a speciall patron and tutor to al begging Friers graunting them to haue and enioy reuenues in this worlde in the world to come euerlasting life Among the which Friers there was one named Alanus de rupe a Blacke Frier which made the Rosary of our Ladies Psalter so they terme it and erected a certaine new fraternitie vpon the same called Fraternitas Coronariorum pertaining to the order of the Dominickes of the which order Iacobus Sprenger one of the condemners of Ioannes de Wesalia aboue mentioned was a great aduācer and especially this Pope Sixtus 4. who gaue to the sayd fraternities large graces and priuilegies Concerning the institution of this Rosary there was a booke set forth about the yere of our Lord 1480. in the beginning wherof is declared that the blessed virgin entred into the celle of this Alanus and was so familiar with him that not onely she did espouse him to her husband but also kissed him with her heauenly mouth and also for more familiaritie opened to hym her pappes and powred great plentie of her owne milke into his mouth For the confirmation whereof the sayde Alanus this holy babe sayth the storie did sweare deepely curssing himselfe if it were not thus as he had made relation This fabulous figment when I read in the centuries of Iohn Bale I began with my selfe to mistrust the credite therof and had thought not to trouble the reader with suche incredible forgeries But as the prouidence of God worketh in all things so also it appeared in thys that the very same booke came to my hands at the wryting hereof wherein this selfe same narration is conteined wherein I found not onely this to be true which in Ihon Bale is expressed but also found in like manner an other wonder as prodigious as this where in an other place not farre off is storied in the same booke howe that about the time of S. Dominicke there was a certaine matrone in Spaine named Lucia which being taken captiue by the Saracenes hauing her husband killed was caried great with childe into the Turkish land When the time of her labour came shee being left desolate among beastes and hogs and remembring thys twise holy Rosary first instituted sayth the booke by S. Dominicke and afterwarde renued by Alanus eftsoones the holy virgin was ready and stoode by her receiued the childe at her trauaile supplying all the partes of a diligent midwife and moreouer causing a Priest sodenly to appeare gaue the childe to be Christened calling it after her owne name Marianus and so was shee wife to Alanus midwife to Lucia and Godmother to Marianus Which story if it be true then is the Popes Canon by thys example to be controlled whiche permitteth midwiues in time of necessity to baptise seeing the blessed Uirgine playing the parte her selfe of a midwife durst not Baptise thys childe without a priest It followeth more in the storye that by the helpe of the sayd blessed virgin this Lucia our Ladies gossip after her Purification was restored with her childe safe to her country