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lord_n blood_n body_n jesus_n 12,126 5 6.1739 4 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A56199 Romes master-peece, or, The grand conspiracy of the Pope and his iesuited instruments, to extirpate the Protestant religion, re-establish popery, subvert lawes, liberties, peace, parliaments, by kindling a civill war in Scotland, and all His Majesties realmes, and to poyson the King himselfe in case hee comply not with them in these their execrable designes revealed out of conscience to Andreas ab Habernfeld, by an agent sent from Rome into England, by Cardinall Barbarino, as an assistant to con the Popes late nuncio, to prosecute this most execrable plot, (in which he persisted a principall actor severall yeares) who discovered it to Sir William Boswell His Majesties agent at the Hague, 6 Sept. 1640. he, under an oath of secrecie, to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury (among whose papers it was casually found by Master Pyrnne, May, 31. 1643) who communicated it to the King, as the greatest businesse that ever was put to him / published by authority of Parliament by William Prynne ... Prynne, William, 1600-1669.; Habervešl z Habernfeldu, Ondřej.; Boswell, William, Sir, d. 1649.; Laud, William, 1573-1645. 1644 (1644) Wing P4056; ESTC R7561 44,036 61

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pragmaticall peremptory Iesuits who in Popish Kingdomes are in perpetuall enmity with all other orders and they with them they having beene oft banished out of France and other Realmes by the Sorbonists Dominicans and other orders no Protestants writing so bitterly against this Popish Order as themselves as some of their Priests Dominicans and other Friers have done yea the Priests and Jesuites in England were lately at great variance and persecuted and writ against one another with much violence This same then is no good argument that the Arch-bi held no correspondence with Priests and other Orders can beare no good affection to the Church of Rome in whose superstitious Ceremonies he outstripped most Priests themselves VVhat correspondency he held with Franciscus de Sancta Clara with other Priests and Doctor Smith Bishop of Calcedon whom the Jesuits likewise have persecuted and got excommunicated though of their owne Church and religion is at large discovered in a Books in●●●●led The English Pope and how well he approved of some Romish doctrines Alt●●s and Massing rites is evident by the Scottish Common-prayer-booke then found in the Archbishops chamber with all those alterations wherein it differs from the English written with his owne hand in the margin some of which smell very strongly of Popery as namely his blotting out of these words at the delivery of the Bread and Wine in the Sacrament Take and eate this in remembrance that Christ dyed for thee and feed on him in thy heart by faith with thankesgiving Take and drink● this in remembrance that Christs blood was shed for thee c. and leaving onely this former clause the better to justifie and imply a corporall presence of Christ in the Sacrament The body of our Lord Iesus Christ which was given for thee The blood of our Lord Iesus Christ which was shed for thee preserve thy body and soule unto everlasting life And this popish Rubricke therein written with his owne hand The Presbyter during the time of consecration shall stand AT THE MIDDLE OF THE ALTAR where he may with more ease and decency USE BOTH HIS HANDS then he can do if he stand at the North end with other particulars of this kind Moreover in his booke of Private devotions written with his owne hand he hath after the Romish form reduced all his prayers to Ca●●nicall houres many of them for his late good Lord and Master the Duke and Dutches of Buckingham and their family and some against the Scotch Rebels as he stiles them And in the fore-mentioned Memorials of his life written with his owne hand there are these suspicious passages among others besides the offer of the Cardinals-cap An. 1631. I●n 21. and 26. My nearer acquaintance began to settle with Do. S. God blesse us in it I●nii 25. D. S. with me at Fulham cum M● c. meant of Dr. Smith the Popish Bishop of Calcedon as is conceived Iun. 25. Mr. Fr. Windebanke my old friend was 〈◊〉 Secretary of State which place I OBTAINED FOR HIM of my gracious Master King Charles What an Arch-Papist and conspiratour he was the Plot relates and his flight into France for releasing Papists and Iesuits out of prison from executions for debts by his owne Warrants and imprisoning those Officers who apprehended them confirmes About this time Dr. Theodor Price Subdean of Westminster a man very intimate with the Archbishop and recommended specially to the King by him to be a Welsh Bishop in opposition to the Earle of Pembroke and his Chaptain Griffith Williams now an Irish Prelate soon after died a reconciled Papist and received extream● Vnction from a Priest Noscitur ex comite August 30. 1634. He hath this memoriall Saturday at Oatelands the Queen sent for me and gave 〈◊〉 thanks for a businesse with which she trusted me her promise then that she would be my friend and that I should have immediate addresse to her when I had ●ccasion All which considered together with his Chaplaines licencing divers popish Bookes with their ●xpunging most passages against Popery out of Bookes brought to the Presse and other particulars commonly knowne will give a true Character of his temper that 〈◊〉 is another Ca●●ander or middle man betweene an absolute Papist and a reall Protestant who will far sooner hug a popish Priest in his bosome then take ● Puritan by the little finger an absolute Papist in all matters of ceremony pompe and externall worship in which he was over● zealous even to an open bitter persecution of all consci●●tious Ministers who made scruple of them if not halfe an one at least in Doctrinall 〈◊〉 How far he was guilty of a conditionall voting the breaking up the last Parliament before this was called and for what end it was summoned this other memoriall under his owne hand will attest Dec. 5 1639. Thursday the King declared his resolution for a Parliament in case of the Scottish rebellion the first movers to it were my L. Deputy of Ireland my Lord Marquesse Hamilton and my selfe And a Resolution voted at the Board to assist the King in extraordinary wayes if the Parliament should prove peevish and Refuse c. But of him sufficient till his charge now in preparation and since transmitted to the Lords shall come in Observations on and from the relation of this plot FFom the relation of the former Plot by so good a hand our own three Realms and a●● forraigne Protestant States may receive full satisfaction First that there hath been a most cunning strong execrable conspiracie long since contrived at Rome and for divers yeeres together most vigorously pursued in England with all industry policy subtilty engines by many active potent confederates of all sorts all sexes to undermine the Protestant Religion re-establish Popery and alter the very frame of civill government in all the Kings Dominions wherein a most dangerous visible progresse hath been lately made Secondly That to effect this traiterous designe they have not onely secretly erected some Monasteries of Monkes Nunnes in and about London but sent over hither whole Regiments of most active subtill Iesuits incorporated into a particular new society whereof the Pope himselfe is head and Cardinall Barbarino his Vicar which Society was first discovered and some of them apprehended in th●ir private Colledge at Clerken-well together with their bookes of account Reliques and Massing Trinket● about the beginning of the second Parliament of this King yet such power favour friends they had then acquired that their persons were speedily and most indirectly released out of Newgate without any prosecution to prevent that Parliaments proceedings against them which examined this abuse and illegall release Since which this conjured society increasing in strength and number secretly replanted themselves in Queens-street and Long-acre and their purses are now so strong their hopes so elevated their designes so ripened as they have there purchased founded a new magnificent Colledge of their owne for their habitation neere the