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A57667 Pansebeia, or, A view of all religions in the world with the severall church-governments from the creation, to these times : also, a discovery of all known heresies in all ages and places, and choice observations and reflections throughout the whole / by Alexander Ross. Ross, Alexander, 1591-1654.; Haestens, Henrick van.; Davies, John, 1625-1693. 1655 (1655) Wing R1972_pt1; Wing R1944_pt2; ESTC R216906 502,923 690

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authority that is an immediate call from heaven the same infallibility of judgement or power of giving the Holy Ghost that the Apostles had nor was their Doctrine otherwise anthenticall than as it was conformable to the Doctrine of the Apostles Q. But was not the Church after the Apostles decease left an Orphan being destitute of these extraordinary Apostolicall graces A. No for though she was deprived of the personall presence of the Apostles yet she is not destitute of their infallible judgement left in their writings with her which supply the Apostles absence till the end of the World Q. Co●ld one man at the same time ●e both an Apostle and a Bishop or Presbyter A. Yes in case of necessity for Iames was an Apostle and Bishop of Ierusalem too because that was the Mother-Church to which resorted Jews of all Nations for instruction and knowledge therefore it was fitting that none lesse than an Apostle should reside there for the greater authority and satisfaction Q. Can Episcopacy be proved by the Canons of the Apostles and Councel of Antioch A. Those Canons are much doubted if they be the Apostles or not however it is probable to me that the parochian not the Diocesan Bishop is there meant for there is no superiority there given but of order and respect partly because of the eminency of the place or City where he lived partly by reason of his own worth and learning without whose advice matters of moment should not be done by the other Bishops or Presbyters nor should he do anything without them but should together ordain Presbyters and Deacons for that is a matter of moment yet he is onely named there because he being as it were the head the rest are understood Q. Was Acrius an Heretick for affirming there was no difference between a Bishop and a Presbyter A. No Though for this opinion Epiphanius and out of him Austin place him among the hereticks for the Scripture puts no difference between these The Church of Alexandria was the first that put difference between them as Epiphanius seems to affirm when he saith Haeres 68. that the Church of Alexandria doth not admit of two Bishops But though Aerius was not in this an Heretick yet he was in an error if he thought that there was no difference at all among Bishops or Presbyte●s for one is above another in gifts in honour in order though perhaps not in Jurisdiction authority and pastorall Function Quest. Is the Church to be ruled by the Civill Magistrate A. No for the Church being christs spiritual Kingdome and not of this world is to be guided by her own spirituall Officers as the State is ruled by temporall Officers Caesar must have what is Caesar's and God that which is Gods's And for this cause the Church and State have their different Lawes and punishments Neither had the Apostles chose● Elders and other Officers in the Church if the Civil Magistrate had been to rule it and had the Church of Ierus●lem been all one with the State thereof or the church of Crete all one with the Kingdome of Crete the Apostles had incroached upon the temporall Government had been guilty of Rebellion and proved enemies to Casar when they set up Elders and other Church-Officers in those and other places besides VVomen sometimes and Children are Magistrates and Princes but the one must not speak in the Church 1. Cor. 14. 34. The others are not fit to be made Bishops 1. Tim. 3. Quest. Are Church Governours ●y Divine Institution A. Yes for Christ appointed Apostles Prophets Evangelists Teachers and other helps of Government 1 Cor. 12. 28 Paul left Titus in Cre●e to ordain Elders in every City Tit. 1. 5. The Apostles ordained Elders in every Church Asts 14. 23. which Officers were in the Church before there was any christian State or christian Magistrate And as Christ appointed Rulers for his Church so he gave them the Keyes of heaven or power to bind and loose Mat. 16. 19. 18. 17. 18 and to remit and retain sins Iohn 20. 23. these are said to have the rule over us Heb. 13. 17. 24. this ruling power was exercised by Paul against Hymeneus and Alexander 1. Tim. 1. 20. and injoyned to the Elders of Corinth 1. Cor. 5. 3. 12 13. and was practised before them by the Priests upon V●ziah 2. Chron. 26. 17 18. 21. by Phine●as the Priest Num. 25. by Christ himself in whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple Q. Have we any president for appeals from the Classicall to the higher assemblies A. Yes for then was an appeal from the Church of Antioch concerning some Jewish ceremonies to the assembly of the Apostles and Elders at Ierusalem Acts 15. 1 2 6. Q. Who are to judge of scandals A. The Ministers 1. Cor. 5. 12. for they succeeded the Priests and Levites in the old Law but these were appointed Judges by God in such cases Deut. 17. 8 9. Q. Is the Church-Government by Elders or Bishops Deacons Doctors and Teachers al●erable A. Not in the substance or essentialls thereof but In the circumstances or adjuncts it is alterable as in the manner time place and other circumstances of Election So the Government by Elders and Deacons is not to be changed but that they should be elected by all the people and that there should be the strict number of seven Deacons in each parish is not needfull though at first as Acts 6. 5. there were but seven chosen and that by the multitude Q. Wherein is moderate Episcopacy different from Presbytery A. Presbytery is Episcopacy dilated and Episcopacy is Presbytery contracted so the government is in effect the same differing onely as the fist or hand contracted from the same hand expanded or dilated onely Episcopacy is more subject to error and corruption than Presbytery and this more subject to disorder and confusion by reason of parity than Episcopacy the peace of the Church the suppressing of schisme and heresie the dignity of the Clergy are more consistent with Episcopacy than with Presbytery but this again is lesse obnoxious to pride and tyranny than Episcopacy by which we see that no Government is perfectly exempted from corruption in this life nihil est ex omni parte beatum But I find that as the Romans in their greatest dangers betook themselves to the Dictatorship so hath the Church in her extremities had recourse to Episcopacy Q. May the Civil Magistrate change the Church-Government A. He may alter the outward form thereof as it depends upon the circumstances of time place and persons but the substance of it he cannot change he can also by his Laws force the observation of the Government and punish the disturbers of the Churches peace Q. May the same man be both a Magistrate and a Minister A. Though among the Gentiles it was lawfull as we see in Anius that was both King and Priest Rex hominum Phoebique
from the Father and the Son not by way of Generation or Conception but of Eternal and Spiritual dilection he also taught that it was injustice to punish any man for opinions in Religion or Heresie The Whippers taught that whipping of themselves with rods full of knots and sharp pricks did more exp●●te and abolish sin then confession that this their voluntary whipping was before Martyrdom which was inflicted by outward force that now there was no use of the Gospel nor of the Baptisme of Water sith the Baptisme of Blood was better that holy water was ●●●ies●e that no man could be saved who did 〈…〉 himselfe They also held perjury lawful The 〈◊〉 whose author was one Hermannus Italus held community of Wives lawful which Doctrine they put in practise at their meetings to pray then putting out their l●ghts ●hey used promisc●ous copnlation and the children born of such commixtion they put to death They taught that all things amongst Christians should be in common that Magistracy did not consist with Christianity and that the Saints did not see God till the day of judgement Gerardus Sagarellus of Parma whose Disciples were named Pseud●-apostoli that is false Apostles because they bragged that they did imit●te the Apostles poverty therefore they would not take or keep money or reserve any thing for the next day he taught that to make vows or to swear at all was unlawful that marriages might be dissolved by such as would embrace their Religion and that they were the onely Christians they were enemies to Tythes and to Churches which for prayer they accounted no better then Hogs Styes Q. 7 What were the opinions in Religion the feurteenth Century A. The Beguardi who professed a Monastical life taught that we might attaine to as much perfection and beatitude in this life as in Heaven that all intellectual natures were blessed in themselves not in God that it was a sin to kisse a Woman but not to lie with her because nature inclined to this but not to that That perfect and spiritual men were freed from obedience to superiours from fasting praying and good works and that such men could not sin nor encrease in grace being perfect already They would have no reverence to be used in the Eucharist nor at all to receive it for that did argue imperfection The Beguinae professed the same Tenets and withal were against vows and voluntary poverty The Beguini taught that wealth consisted not with Evangelical perfection and therefore blamed Pope Iohn 22 for permitting the Franciscans to have corn in their barns and wine in their cellars They held that the state of Minorites was more perfect then that of Bishops that they were not bound to give an account of their faith when they were demanded by the Inquisitors and that the Pope had no power to dispense with Vows The Lolhards so called from Walter Lolhard their author held that Lucifer was injuriously thrust out of Heaven that Michael and the blessed Angels should be punished eternally that Lucifer should be saved that the blessed Virgin lost her Virginity after Christs birth and that God did neither see nor would punish sins committed under ground therefore they gave themselves to all uncleannesse in their vaults and caves Richardus Armacanus taught that voluntary poverty was unlawful and that priests could blesse and confer orders as well as Bishops One Ianovesi●s taught that in the year ●●60 on Whitsunday Antichrist would come who should pervert all Christians and should mark them in their Hands and Foreheads and then should be damned eternally and that all Iewes Saracens and Infidels who were seduced by Antichrist should after his destruction be converted to Christ but not the Christians that fell off from Christ. The Turelupini taught that we should not be ashamed of those members we have from nature and so like the Cynicks they gave themselves openly to all uncleannesse they held also that we were not to pray with our voice but with the heart onely Q. 8. What were the Tenets of the Wicklevits who lived in this Centurie A. They were so called from Iohn Wickliffe an Englishman and taught that the substance of bread and wine remained in the Sacrament that neither Priest nor Bishop remaining in any mortal sin could consecrate or ordain that the Mass had no ground in Scripture that outward confession was needlesse where there was true contrition that a wicked Pope had no power over the faithful that Clergy-men should have no possessions that none should be excommunicate by the Church but he who is first excommunicate by God that the Prelate who excommunicates a Clerk appealing to the King is a traitor● and so is he that being excommunicate refuseth to hear or to preach that Deacons and Priests may preach without authority of the Bishop that the King might invade the Churches Revenues that the people may punish their Kings that the Laity may detain or take away the Tyt●es that special prayers for any man were of no more force then general that religious orders were unlawful and that such should labour with their hands that it was a sin in Constantine and others to enrich the Church that the Church of Rome was Satans Syn●gogue they rejected also the Popes election by Cardinals Indulgences decretal Epistles the Popes excommunications and his supremacy they held also that Austin Benet and Bernard were damned for instituting religious orders that God ought to obey the Devil that he who gives almes to Monasteries should be excommunicate that they are Simoniacks who pray for their Parents or Benefactors that Bishops reserved to themselves the power of Ordination Confirmation and Consecration for lucres sake that Universities Degrees and Schools of Learning were hurtfull to the Church These and such like Tenets of Wickliff are let down in the Councel of Constance where they were condemned Other opinions are fathered upon him to wit that man had no free will that the sins of the Predestinate were venial but of the Reprobate all mortal that the Saints were not to be invocated nor their reliques kept nor the Crosse to be worshipped nor images to be placed in Churches they rejected also Vows Canonical hours Church-Musick Fasting Baptizing of Infants Benedictions Chrism and Episcopacy He held also that the Brother and sister might marry that every crea●ure may ●e called God because its perfection is in God Q. 9. What opinions were taught the fifteenth Century A. Iohn Hus of Bohemia publickly maintained the Doctrine of Waldus and Wickliffe and withal taught that Saint Peter was never head of the Church that the Church is onely of the predestinate that Saint Paul when he was a persecutor was not a member of Satan that the Divinity and the Humanity made up one Christ whereas the personal union consisted indeed not between the two Natures but between the Person of the Word and the Humane Nature That the Pope was subject to Cesar that the Pope
power to preach administer the Sacraments hear confessions absolve c. in any place where they please and to have their Coadjutors both spiritual as Priests and Temporal as Cooks Bakers Caterers Butlers c. on whom the Iesuites professed can conferr sacred orders The Iesuites have this priviledge also to change their General and he power to send them whither he pleaseth and call them back again without asking leave of the Pope They may also absolve all Hereticks confessing and the General may excommunicate and imprison Delinquents They are exempted from the secular power and from all Taxes and Tithes they may carry with them moveable Altars when they travel and may disguise themselves into any habit he that visits a Iesuites House or Colledge shall have a plenary indulgence They have also power to exercise all Episcopal Functions namely to ordain anoint exorcise confirm consecrate dispense c. All these privledges were given to them by Paul the third in several Bulls Pope Iulius the third Pauls successor gave them a priviledge to erect Universities where they pleased and to conferr what degrees they will to dispense also with fasting and prohibited meats Pope Pius the fourth confirmeth all the former priviledges Pius the fifth grants that such Iesuites as forsake their order by leave from the Pope or General shall enter into no other order except the Carthusian if they apostatise without leave they shall be excommunicate he gives them also power to read publickly in any University they come to without asking leave and that none must hinder them but all are bound to hear them Gregory the thirteenth gave them power to have their Conse●vators Iudges and Advocates and to recite their Canonical hours without the Quire and to correct change interpret expunge and burn such books as they dislike and to be the Popes Library keepers and exempteth them from being necessarily present at Processions or Funerals By reason of these and other priviledges granted to this order besides their own industry they grew so numerous in the space of 75. years that they had Anno 1608. as Ribadene●a sheweth 293. Colledges besides 123. Houses and of their Society were reckoned 10581. Out of their Colledges they raise a reven●e of Twenty hundred thousand Crowns yearly Q. 8. Are there no other orders in the Church of Rome A. There are divers more but of lesse note whose original is uncertain both in respect of their Author and time besides there be many subdivisions of one and the same order as the Franciscans are subdivided into Observantes C●nventuales Minimi Capuci●l Collectanei whose charge was to receive the money that is given them Amadeani Reformati de Evangelio Chiacini cum barba de Portiuncula Paulini Bosiani Gaudentes de Augustinis with their open shooes Servientes All these differ little except in some smal matters There be also some Monks called Ambrosiani who wear red cloaks over white coats Others are called Capellani whose garments are partly black and partly blew Chal●meriani wear a white crosse upon a white cloak Cellarii from their Cells are so called and Brothers of mercy from visiting the sick and carrying the dead to the grave in the inside they wear black linnen on the outside a sooty colour garment Clavigeri wear upon a black cowle two keys intimating by this that they have power to open and shut Heaven They make Saint Peter the Author of their order Cruciferi these bow their bodies and heads as they walk go bare-foot and wear a white cloak girt with a rope they carry always in their hands a little wooden crosse The Brothers of the Crosse wear a black cloak without a hood and bear the Crosse before their breast For●●ciferi so called from wear●ng a pair of sheers on their cloak by which they shew that they clip off all carnall lusts as it were with a pair of sheers They wear a black cloak and hood these we may call Sheet-Brothers The Brothers of Helen brag that they were instituted by Helen Constantin's Mother after she had found out the Crosse they wear a white garment and on it a yellow Cross Hospitalarii so called from looking to Hospitals they wear black they differ from the former of this name and so do the Cruciferi The Brothers of Saint Iames wear a fandy-coloured garment and shells hanging at it they make Saint Iames their Patron The Order of Ignorance These Monks think it mans chief happinesse to know nothing This order of Ignorance is now the greatest in the world and is like to swallow up all the Orders and Degrees of Learning as Pharao's lean Kine did devour the fat So much the more happy will this Order be when it is fed with Tythes and Colledges There is an order of Ioannites differing from the former these wear a read garment to represent Christs Blood and on the breast thereof is woven a Chalice to shew that in his Blood our sins are washed they also hold a Book still in their hand The order of the Valley of Iosaphat goeth in a Purple ●arment these appoint Judges to decide controversies of marriage The order of Ioseph was erected in honour of Maries supposed Husband These wear ash-coloured cloathes and a white hood The order of Lazarus or Magdalen wear a green crosse upon a black cloak with a hood there be two sorts of them some contemplative who are black within and white without using ordinary food the others wear a brown or ●awny colour and are active their food is onely herbs and roots The order of Nuns of Saint Mary de decem virtutibus that is Of the ten vertues which consist onely in repeating the Ave Mary ten times They wear a black Vaile a white Coat a red Scapular and an ash-coloured cloak There be two other orders of Saint Mary the one wears a white coat and a black cloak like Carmelites the other are all white there is also the order of Maries Conception The order called Reclusi shut themselves up between two walls or in narrow cells whence they never go out so long as they live The order of Saint Ruffus instituted by him these go like the Canon Regulars wearing a Scapular over a linnen Surplesse and a black coloured hood There is an order of free Nums who maintain themselves and may marry when they will The order of Speculari● are so called from their looking glasses which they always carry their inward garment is black their outward white They wear on their breast a black crosse Among the Romans it was counted an Effeminate trick for men to carry about a Looking glasse therefore Otho is mocked by Juvenal who speaking of the Looking glasse calls it Pathic●ge●t amen Othonis The order of the S●ellati wore Stars on their cloathes some of them have black gownes and black hoods some have cloaks without hoods Some other perty orders there are of small
The Penitents being received into the Church cut their Haire and Beards and lay aside their penitentiall garments and put on clean cloathes after the example of Ioseph when he was delivered out of pris●n This casting off their old cloathes puts them in minde of putting off the old man In Extream Vnction the Priest first besprinkleth the sick person and the whole roome with holy water then he anointeth the organs of the five senses because by them sin infecteth the soul the reines also and feet are anointed to expiate the sins that are in the concupiscible and motive faculties They onely must be anointed of whom there is no hope of recovery Of the Ceremonies used in Sacred Orders we will speak hereafter In Matrimony the Priest blesseth the married couple with prayers and oblations if they were never married before but they are not to blesse the second marriage The Woman is covered with a vaile after the example of Rebecca and to shew her subjection to the man she is united to the man by a Lace or Ribband tied in a knot by a Ring also put on the fourth finger of the left hand because of the veine that reacheth from thence to the heart signifying the mutual love that ought to be between them but marriages are not to be celebrated in Lent and other times of humiliation Q. 7. What are their Tenets concerning the Saints in Heaven A. They register their names in their Calendars after the Pope hath canonised them or given a testimony of their Sanctity and decreed honours for them namely publick Invocation dedication of Altars and Temples to them oblation of Sacrifices celebration of Festival days setting up of their Images and reservation of their Reliques The honour they give to God is called by them Latria that of the Saints is Dulia but the honour which they give to Christs humanity and the Virgin Mary is Hyperdulia 2. They say that the Saints make intercession for us not immediately to God but through Christ they obtain their requests 3. That we ought to invocate both Saints and Angels 4. That their Images are to be worshipped that the Images of Christ and of the Saints are not Idols because Idols are representations of that which is not and in Scripture the word Idol is spoken onely of Heathen Images that it is not unlawful to represent God by such Images as he hath described himself therefore they pain● God in the form of an old man the Holy Ghost in the form of a Dove That though the Images of Christ and the Apostles are to be honoured in relation to the persons which they represent yet we must not think there is any Divinity in them or that they can help us or that we ought to aske any thing of them 5. That the Images of Christ and the Saints should be placed in Churches because the Images of the Cherubims were placed in Salomons Temple and before in the Tabernacle 6. That the Reliques of Christ and of the Saints are to be honoured and kissed as holy pledges of our Patrons yet not to be adored as God nor invocated as Saints 7. That the true Crosse of Christ the Nailes the Thornes c. by way of of analogy and reduction are to be worshipped with the same kind of worship or Latria that Christ is that the signe of the Crosse in the forehead or in the aire is a Sacred and venerable signe powerful to drive away evil spirits 8. That Pilgrimages ought to be undertaken to those holy places where the Images and Reliques of Christ and of the Saints are kept 9. That days should be kept holy in memory of the Saints the observation of which is a part of divine worship Q. 8. What is their Doctrine concerning the Church A. They teach that the government of the Church is Monarchical as being the most excellent form of government That the government of the Church was founded on the Person of Saint Peter That Peter was Bishop of Rome and so continued till his death That the Pope is Peters Successor and Christs Vicar by whom he is made head of the Church Militant That the Pope is not Antichrist but that the great Antichrist shall be a particular man of the Tribe of Dan who shall reign in Ierusalem three years and a half and shall be acknowleged by the Iewes as their Messiah whom he will make believe that he is of the Tribe of Iuda and descended of David 2. They hold that the Pope is the supream Judge in controversies of Faith and manners that his judgement is certain and infallible that he can erre in particular controversies of fact depending upon mans testimony and that he may erre as a private Doctor in questions of right as well of faith as of manners but that he cannot erre when with a General Council he makes decrees of faith or general precepts of manners and that the Pope is to be obeyed though either by himself or by a particular Council● he erre in some doubtful matters but they generally now believe that though the Pope were an Heretick yet he cannot prescribe or define any Heretical Doctrine to be believed by the whole Church That the Pope hath a spiritual coactive jurisdiction in making Laws to bind the conscience by his sole authority without the consent of Priests or people and that he can judge and punish the transgressors of his Laws That as the Apostles had their immediate authority from Christ so the Bishops have the same immediately from the Pope That the Pope hath a supream power over the temporal estates of Christians to depose Kings and dispose of their Kingdoms in order to spiritual things and so far as it is necessary to the salvation of souls That it is not repugnant to Gods word for the same man to be both a Political and Ecclesiastical Prince seeing Melchisedech Moses Eli Samuel and the Macchabees exercised both powers 3. They believe that the true Church of Christ is onely that Society which acknowledgeth the Pope to be head thereof and Christs Vicar upon earth That they which are not baptized and the Catechumeni are not properly and actually members of the Church but onely in possibility That Hereticks Schismaticks and excommunicate persons are not members of the Church That reprobates are members of the militant Church Because in Noah's Ark were unclean beasts in the same Net are good and bad fishes at the same Wedding-feast many were called but few chosen in the same Sheep-fold are same Goats in the same house are vessels of dishonour Judas was one of the Apostles c. That the true Catholike Church is always visible for it is compared to a Mountain to a Candle to a City on a Hill c. That the true visible Church can never fail totally Because it is built on a Rock against which Hell Gates cannot prevaile c. That the true Church cannot fall into errour Because it is the Pillar