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A54576 A compendious history of the Catholick church from the year 600 untill the year 1600 shewing her deformation and reformation : together with the rise, reign, rage, and begin-fall of the Roman AntiChrist : with many other profitable instructions gathered out of divers writers of the several times, and other histories / by Alexander Petrie ... Petrie, Alexander, 1594?-1662.; Church of Scotland. General Assembly. 1657 (1657) Wing P1879; ESTC R4555 1,586,559 1,238

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parts thereof Did not Bernard or whosoever was the Author of that Sermon say unto the Councel That the Imposthume was spread through all the body of the Church from the sole to the top the Bride was spoiled and even they which were called the Bridegrooms of the Church were not the friends of the Bridegroom And did not the Councel so far take with this rebuke that some Acts were made for Reformation but no Reformation did follow 14. Before I do leave Bernard here I do add an History from P. Soave in How the worship given unto the blessed Virgin came up by degrees Histor Conc. Triden lib. 2. concerning the degrees of the worship which is given unto the Virgin Mary After the impieties saith he of Nestorius dividing Christ making two sons and denying that he who was born of the Virgin Mary is God the Church desirous to ingraft this Catholique truth in the mindes of believers thought good to repeat often in the Churches both of the East and West these two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Mary the Mother of God This indeed was appointed for the honor of Christ but by little and little it was communicated unto the Mother and at last referred altogether unto her alone Upon the same ground when the use of Images became frequent they were wont to paint the babe Christ in the arms of his Mother the Virgin to testifie the worship which was due unto him even in that age but quickly they began to worship the Mother without the Son and he was added as a pendicle of the picture Thereafter Writers and Preachers especially who were given to speculation being miscarried with the wilfulness of the people which is powerful in such things as with a land-flood did omit the remembring of Christ and with earnestness strove to devise now praises epithets and sorts of religious worship unto the blessed Virgin So that about the year 1050. they devised for her honor the dayly Office which is distinguished into seven Canonical hours after the same maner as in former times it was wont to be done to the honor of God In one hundred years next following the veneration grew so that it seemed to have come unto the height those titles being given unto her which in the Scriptures are spoken of the Divine wisdom Among the priviledges then devised was that of universal freedom from original sin which opinion had been in the mindes onely of some private persons but was not yet come among the Ceremonies of the Church nor into the mindes of the learned About the year 1136. the Canons of Lions durst first bring it into the Service of the Church S. Bernard flourishing at that time for piety and learning before all the Divines of that age and so immoderate in the praises of the blessed Virgin that in some place he calleth her The neck of the Church as if by her all grace did flow from the Head nevertheless he sharply writeth against these Canons that without reason and without example of former times they had brought in so dangerous a novelty he confesseth that they had matter enough to commend the blessed Virgin but such ambitious novelty which is the mother of fondness the sister of superstition and daughter of levity could not please her In that Epistle of Bernard it is remarkable which P. Soave toucheth not that the Canons did alledge they had a writ of revelation for them Bernard dispiseth that saying Even as if any man could not produce a writ wherein the Virgin may seem to command to give the same worship unto her parents according to the word of God saying Honor thy father and mother I perswade my self easily to give no credit unto such writs that are not confirmed by reason nor certain Authority c. I say this is remarkable that Bernard did reject their pretended revelations as a means whereby they might have been deceived not in that onely but in other things and so I return unto the former History In the next age saith P. Soave the Scholastick Doctors of both Orders Franciscans and Dominicans did by their writs refute this opinion until the year 1300. when Iohannes Scotus a Franciscan having examined the reasons of this question diligently did at last flie unto the power of God and said God could do that she was never in sin or that she was obnoxious unto sin for a moment of time onely or for a short time and onely God knoweth which of the three was true but the first is most probable unless it be against the Authority of the Church or Scriptures The doctrine of this School-man famous in his time did all the Franciscan Friers follow for the most part but in this singular article they having boldly entered the gate that was opened by this Author they held it simply and absolutely to be true that he said might be and had propounded it as probable under a doubt and uncertain condition unless it be contrary unto Orthodox saith The Dominicans do fight constantly against it under the safeguard of Thomas a famous Doctor of that Order both for his excellent doctrine and for the commendation of P. Iohn 22. For he to hold down the Order of the Franciscans who for the most part did partake with Lewes the Emperor after his excommunication did commend that Doctor and advance his doctrine Behold upon what reason the Pope did ground his doctrine The shew of piety and Religion did prevail so that the opinion of the Franciscans did please almost them all it was accepted by the University of Paris which in the conceit of excellent doctrine went before all others and thereafter by the Councel of Basil after much disputation was approved and it was forbidden to preach or teach the contrary opinion which had place in these Nations that did approve that Councel At last Pope Sixtus IV. a Franciscan did publish two decrees of this point in the first Ann. 1476. he confirmed a new Officium that was gathered by Leonard Nogarol Protonotary and Indulgences were granted unto such as did keep that or did entertain it by their presence In the other he condemned as false and erroneous the assertion of such as say That the defence of her conception is heretical or thought that the celebration of that Office was a sin and all preachers and all others were denied of all holy things who held either this or the contrary opinion to be heretical because that controversie was not determined by the Roman Church and Apostolical See But here was not an end of the contention hatred swelling more and more twixt these two Orders and yearly renewed in the moneth of December so that Pope Leo X. putting to his helping hand thought to have ended the strife and for that cause did write unto many but the change of Religion in Germany changed his thoughts unto other weightier things and as they are wont in a besiedged City they leave factions and
and tokens of bondage and have no Land in Scotland unless they shall dwell in it and if they will not dwell there the Scots should give them for their present possessions 30000 marks of Silver All this time the English were not of one accord for the King followed the counsel of Spencer Earl of Arundel the other Nobility caused the King to banish him but the next year he was restored to the great disturbance of the Kingdom at last they conspire to imprison the King and Hugh Spencer suffered death Tho. Cooper 2. When King Robert came to great age he ordained in Parliament his Successors to wit his Son David a child of eight years old which was espoused to Johanna Daughter of Edward the II. and if he should die without childe he ordained his Son in law Robert Stuart to succeed After he had exhorted the Estates to keep amity and unity he gave them three counsels 1. To beware that the Isles Aebudes be never given unto one man 2. That they never hazzard all their strength in one fight with the English 3. That they make not long truce with them After him Thomas Randolf Earl of Murray was chosen Regent of Scotland he was a good Justiciary and by no means would spare thieves and robbers So that when a Gentleman came from the Pope's Court and thought himself secure because he had obtained the Pope's pardon Thomas caused to apprehend him and said The pardon of sin belongeth unto the Pope but punishment of the body is in the King's hand Buchan lib. 9. 3. An. 1328. Charls the IV. King of France died without children then The title of England unto France Edward the III. King of England his Sisters Son claimeth the Crown of France as nearest Heir The French prefer Philip de Valois the Uncle's Son and they exclude Edward by a Law which they call Salica excluding women from succession At the first when the Estates of France had received Philip Edward did him homage for his Lands in France but when he was denied of a just demand wars began between these two Nations which ceased not altogether until the year 1495. as Tho. Cooper sheweth or rather until the days of Queen Elizabeth for sometimes the French prevailed and sometimes the English even so far as to be crowned at Paris and held Parliaments and had Deputies governing France Sometimes were truce of thirteen years or of ten years but never an absolute peace before Queen Elizabeth In the year 1393. the King of Armenia came into France and shewed how the Turks and Scythians were not only oppressing Hungary but were aiming at the conquest of all Christendom and in the mean time Christians were devouring one another with such words he perswaded both the Kings into a truce for four years Frossard Hist lib. 4. But I leave Civil affairs and return unto the Church 4. In the year 1306. an English Eremite preached at Pauls in London that some Sacraments that were then in use in the Church were not of Christ's institution therefore he was committed to prison Io. Bale ex Io. Baconthorp in Sent. lib. 4. dist 2. q. 1. 5. That John Baconthorp wrote on the Sentences where he followeth the truth in many things especially he refuteth sundry subtilties of Io. Scotus as Baptista Mantuanus hath marked Iste tenebrosi damnat vestigia Scoti Et per sacra novis it documenta viis Hunc habeant quibus est sapientia grata redundat Istius in sacris fontibus omne sophos He wrote de Domino Christi where he proveth that the highest Bishop in every Kingdom should be under Princes Bale Cent. 4. sect 82. 6. Richard Primate of Ireland alias Armachanus was his disciple and taught the same doctrine he translated the Bible into Irish In a Sermon at Paul's Cross in London An. 1356. he said In the estate of innocence none had been a beggar therefore according to that estate unless the law of necessity do press men none desireth nor should be a beggar as neither was Christ willingly a beggar the Law also forbiddeth it Deut. 15. There shall not be a beggar among you He discovered the hypocrisie of Friers in that though they professed poverty yet they had stately houses like the Palaces of Princes and more costly Churches then any Cathedral more richer ornaments then all the Princes more and better books then all the Doctors they had Cloisters and walking places so stately and large that men of Arms might fight on horse-back and encounter one another with their spears in them and their apparel richer then the greatest Prelates These Sermons are extant The next year he appeared before Innocentius the VI. and some of the four Orders of Friers appeared against him and he proved his propositions stoutly and manifestly against them that in many respects they had lest their first rules but saith Walsing in Edwar. III. the English Clergy sent not unto him according to their promises but the Friers wanted not plenty of money and so lite pendente before the cause was decided the Friers obtained a confirmation of their priviledges Armachanus died there at Avenion and was canonized 7. William Ockam was a disciple of Jo. Scotus but he became adversary of his doctrine he was the Author of the Sect of Nominales whereby new occasions of controversies arose to withdraw men from the study of faith He was a follower of Pope Nicolaus the V. and therefore was excommunicated by Pope John Then he thought it more safe to live under the Emperor's protection and he said unto the Emperor Lewis Defend me Caesar from the injury of the Pope by thy sword and I will defend thee by the word by writing and invincible reasons and so they did so long as they lived He wrote a Compendium Errorum of Pope John the XXII and a dialogue between a Clark and a Soldier wherein he handleth these questions 1. Whether Ockam's questions the Pope hath any primacy by right from God 2. Whether Peter had any primacy or was ever Bishop of Rome 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome may err Concerning the Emperor he discusseth 1. Whether one man may discharge the offices both of Priest and Emperor 2. Whether the Emperor hath his power from God only or from the Pope also 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome have any power from Christ to commit any jurisdiction unto Caesar and to other Princes 4. Whether Caesar after his election hath power to rule the Republick 5. Whether Kings anointed by a Bishop receive any power from him 6. Whether these Kings be any way subject unto their anointer 7. Whether the seven Electors give as great authority unto the elected Caesar as succession giveth unto other Princes c. All which he disputeth on both sides and concludeth always against the Extravagants He wrote also against Pope Clemens and calleth him an Heretick the Antichrist an hater of Christian poverty a foe of the Common-wealth an
and the cloister II. In Aprile An. 1521. Charles V. calleth a Dyet at Worms thither VVhat was done for against religion An. 1521. was Luther summoned and a safe conduct was sent unto him Some would have dissuaded him because his doctrine was condemned at Rome and his person was accursed there on maundy-thurseday he might be sure that the proceedings of that Court were to be confirmed in this if worse were not done unto himself as was done to John Huss Luther answered I will go thither albeit there were there as many devils as there be tyles in the houses He appeares before the Estates Aprile 17. and was demanded Whether he acknowledges the books that were abroad in his name and when they were named he did acknowledge them Then Whether he would maintain what was writen in them or recall any part of them he answered That question is of great importance I humbly crave some space to advise They grant him one day and then he said these books are not all of one nature some containe the doctrin of faith and piety some were against the errours of the Romanists and some were writen contentiously against the maintainers of these errours to recall the first sort was not the duty of a good man because albeit the Bull of Leo had condemned them yet he had not judged them as impious As for the second sort it is too well known that all the Christian World and especially Germany being miserably vexed doeth groan under a heavy yoake and so to abjure these books were a confirmation of that tyranny He confesseth that in the third sort he had written a little tartely but he is now called to give account of his doctrine and not of his manners and if any will convince him by reason of all men he will be least obstinate nor will he refuse to burn his books if he shall be convinced of any errour in them by testimonies of sacred Scripture the acknowledgement of manifested truth is an excellent gift of God and the rejecting of it or defiling of it with lies hath brought from heaven many thousand calamities Then he was commanded to give his answer in few words He answered I can not recall what I have tought or written unless I be convinced by testimonies of Scripture or manifest reason The Emperour hearing of this answer for he was not present nor was confirmed by the Pope sent them word that he would defend the Church of Rome and use all remedies to extinguish that fire but he will not pronounce sentence against that man untill he be safe at home according to his promise Some there would have followed the example of Constance and said Promises should not be kept unto hereticks Lewes the Palsgrave Elector did oppose saying It were a perpetuall dishonour unto the Germane Nation nor is it tolerable that for favour of priests the publick faith should ly under that infamy Some also said They should not proceed so rashly in a matter of so great importance nor do all men as yet perceive what may follow After some dayes the Bishop of Trevers the Marques of Brandeburgh and some others were named to deal with him and they exhorted him to submit the whole matter unto Cesar and the Princes Luther said The Prophet saith put not your trust in men nor in Princes but especially the word of God is not subject unto men if they will convince mee by that Word I will willingly submit Then they ask Whether he will submit unto a Generall Councell Yes saith he if they rule themselves by the holy Scripture What remedy say they think you may there be in such a deplored case He answered I know no better than that of Gamaliel If this Counsel or work be of men it will turne to nought but if it be of God yee cannot destroy it lest yee be found to fight against God and I wish the Pope would follow this advice for certainly his purpose if it be not of God will shortly he brought to nothing The Bishop of Trevers dealt with him privatly but he continued in that assertion that this cause can be ruled no other way but by the Scripture Then he was commanded to be at home within 21 days and in his way he should not provoke the people by teaching nor writing He gave thanks unto Caesar and the Princes and went away Aprile 26. On May 8. a Decree was published in the name of the Emperour wherein was declared what was done with Luther both ar Rome and Worms and that he continueth obstinate in damned heresies and therefore all men should take him for such a one and after 21 dayes none defend nor lodge him but rather take and imprison him and take all the movables and immovables of all his favourers and abettours and none shall read nor have nor print any of his books but burn them c. This decree did more good unto the Emperour then harme unto the cause for soone after the Pope breaketh his league with France and receives Charles into his bosome As for the judgement of others it appeares by an epistle of Erasmus dated Basil 3 non Septemb. An. 1522. saying I was ever of this mind this tragedy can not be calmed any better way than by silence and this is the judgement of the most prudent among the Cardinals and Princes A most cruell Bull came from the Pope and it did nothing but stirre up the fire Another more cruell Edict comes from Caesar who is altogether prone that way and that restraines the tongues and penns of some but changes not their mindes Some commend his pious mind but they say his judgement followes such as the learned men do not much value So far he It is true Luther was forced to hide himself for a time but was not idle and after this Diet many did contrary unto the Edict Even in Worms aftet they had seen the constancy of Luther and his warrant they receive the preachers of the Gospell and be cause they could not have the liberty of the Churches they set up a portable pulpite and heard the preachers in many places of the town untill the year 1525. when all the priests runne away for fearin time of the rurall tumults and then the religion was set up in all the Churches In Erford began to preach John Lang George Forchem John Culschamer Peter Geldner Melchior Wedman and Justus Menius who had been priests the number of believers was so multiplied that in the year 1523. eight Churches could not contain them Briefly the like was done in Goslaria an Imperiall city of Saxony at Halberstad Hamburgh in Pomerland Liveland c. as Schultet in Annal. shewes particularly and in many of these places the preachers were killed by poison or open violence by the priests and their abetters but to their greater wo. In Low-Germany alone in the time of this Emperour more then fifty thousand persons were beheaded or drowned hanged buried
quench the thirst of our soul and deal with us as he did with the Fathers He said also God declares his will by dreames as he had done unto him selfe and had given him a command to kill all wicked men and pull down all Princes and Magistrats He taught also that all things should be common and all should have alike freedom and liberty without all subiectjon Sleidan Comment lib. 3. 5. In Apile 1525. the countrie-people in Suevia by the river Danube being deluded with such errours began to refuse obedience and they demand 1. liberty to choose their Ministers that will preach the word without mans traditions and decrees 2. liberty from all tieths except only corne and these to be diuided at the discretion of good men a part unto Ministers part unto the poor and part unto publik business 3. it is not equitable that heretofore they have been held in the condition of slaves seing they are made free by the blood of Christ They professe they do not cast off Magistrats but they will not endure that bondage unless it be cleared by testimony of Scripture that it is reasonable 4. It is not reason that they are forbidden to take wild beasts or fishes especially when the beasts destroy their cornefields from the beginning God hath given unto man power over all living creatures 5. it is a great prejudice of the people that woods are in the power of afew men 6. they demand that their Princes or Masters would moderate their dayly burdens of service according to the equity of the Gospell and lay no more upon them than was craved of old c. Ibid. Albeit the attempts of these men was alike against Popish Masters and others which were desirous of Reformation yet I can not find that any Popish person did endeavour to convince them by information Luther did publish books to refute them many times before they did publish their Demands he dissuadeth them from sedition as a most fearfull sin not only in the externall fact but even to be spoken or thought upon After the publishing of the Demands he told them they did wickedly in cloaking theire rebellion with the pretext of sinceer doctrine and equity seing God hath commanded to obey Princes and Masters then he sifteth their Demands severally and shewes that some of them are contrary unto the law of nature and equity and if any of them have any reason in them they should be examined by prudent men but they should not move broiles if their Masters will not let them have the liberty of the gospell they may go in quietness where they may have it but they should not use violence against their Masters He wrote also unto Princes and especially unto the Prelats that their hindering the liberty of the Gospell was a provocation of Gods wrath and their laying of intolerable burdens on their subiects for their own pleasure and prodigality was also offensive unto God and he exhorts them to use all meanes of peace rather then force seeing the issue of warrs is uncertain and arms are sooner taken up then can be layd off When they had taken arms he wrote the third time exhorting both to take away their controverfies by treaties of good and prudent men Many other preachers did also publish books shewing the craft of Satan in raising such broils at that time and that these should not be imputed unto the preaching of the truth as the aduersaries of truth did crie and it is no new thing that the iudgements of God upon men for their sins are imputed unto the Gospell seing in the days of the Apostles and of the primitive Church the heathens said that all their troubles came upon them for the Christian religion whereas God was offended for their idolatry and contempt of the Gospell as they proved by the testimonies of Tertullian in Apolog. and Cyprian contra Demetr Augustin de Civ Dei and others Abr. Scult Ann. ad An. 1525. When neither Princes would yield unto a treaty nor the Bowrs would lay down arms Luther wrote a fourth book exhorting all men as for the quenching a common fire to take arms against the rebells and kill them which had so basely denied obedience unto their Masters and had begun to usurpe other mens possessions and do cloke so vile villany with the name of Christianity Nevertheless these villains grew into a hudge multitude and divided themselves into three Armies one at Biberac another at Algovia and the third at the lake of Constance they took some towns as Winsbergh and Wirtsburgh they killed some Noble men as the Court of Helfenstein most unworthily The Princes that went against them were John Elector of Saxony and his uncle George Philip of Hassia Henry Duke of Brunswik c. In some places when they were put to flight they run into the river there were killed of them in severall places 50000. some write 100000 and the chief enticers wete taken and beheaded XXII Notwithstanding these broiles it pleased God to spread the Progresse the Reformation Reformation the same yeare Luther at that time did first administer the Lords supper in the German language and did ordain a Minister without the Popish rites And Zuinglius did also forsake the Latine language and the rites Albert Marques of Branbeburgh was entituled Master of the Teutonick Order but that year having warr with the King of Pole for some towns of Prussia and seeing no aid from the Emperour was content to agree upon condition that he should acknowledge the King as Superiour and possesse Prussia under the tittle of a Dukedom and then he authorized the Reformed religion through out that Province Gustavus King of Sweden sent for all the Prelats to come unto his palace and there without any noise gave them in their option to continue in their places and professe the Reformed religion or then to leave the Country Some gave him their oath of obedience and others went whether they pleased William Landsgrave of Hassia established the Reformed religion within his jurisdiction So it was established at Gorlik Lauba in Lusatia In Rhetia alone were reckoned 41. preachers of the Gospell So did Philip Count of Hanove Cristopher and Antony Counts of Altenburgh Delmenhorst Conrad of Tecklenburgh Linga and Baltasar Lord of Esens Witmund Vniformity in circumstantials is not necessary all within their territories and so did many other free towns In the year preceeding a motion was made to assemble a Synode of all the Reformed Churches for establishing an uniformity in rites or circumstantiall ceremonies Luther opposeth it asserting that it was not expedient albeit it was propounded in a good zeale yet it hath no precedent for even in the Councell of the Apostls they did treat more of works and traditions than of faith and there they had disputed for the most part concerning opinions questions yet he was no less suspicious of the name of a Councel as of the name
HISTORY Of the CATHOLICK CHURCH From the Year 600 untill the Year 1600. Shewing Her DEFORMATION And REFORMATION Together with The RISE REIGN RAGE and BEGIN-FALL Of the ROMAN ANTICHRIST With many other profitable Instructions Gathered out of divers WRITERS of the several times and other HISTORIES BY ALEXANDER PETRIE Minister of the Scots Congregation at Rotterdam Psalm III. What we have heard and known and our Fathers have told us we will not hide them from their Children shewing unto the Generation to come the praise of the Lord and his strength and his wonderfull Works that he hath done Cyprian de zelo livore Evill shall be eschued the more readily if the beginning and greatness of it be known Origen contra Celsum Lib. 3. As he is deemed to have made progress in Philosophy who being acquainted with the disputes of different opinions hath chosen the best reasons among them So I am bold to say that he is the wisest among Christians who hath most diligently considered the several Sects of Jews and Christians HAGUE Printed by ADRIAN VLACK M. DC LXII HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE TO HIS HIGHNES WILLIAM THE III By the Grace of God PRINCE of ORANGE Count of Nassaw Catzenelbogen Vianden Dietz Lingen Moeurs Bueren Leerdam c. Marquess of ter Vere and Vlissingen Lord and Baron of Breda of the City of the Grave and Land of Kuyck Diest Grimbergen Herstall Kranendonck Warneston Arlay Noseroy S. Vijt Doesbourg Polanen Willemstadt Niewart Ysselstein S. Martensdijck Geertruydenberg Chasteau-regnard the High and Lower Swaluw Naeldwijck c. Vicount Hereditary of Antwerp and Besançon c. Marshal Hereditary of Holland c. I Will honour them that honour me saith the LORD But who can tell what shall be done unto them whom the Lord will honour Certainly those do honour him who serve him religiously They who are careless of Religion do pretend that they cannot serve God because there be so many Religions and they cannot know which is the right But if they were unfeignedly desirous to know they might be resolved since our Lord who is gracious mercifull and abundant in goodness and truth leaves us not in the mist or unto uncertainties but at several times and in divers waies hath spoken unto the Fathers by the Prophets and in the last daies hath spoken unto us by his Son and hath commanded all men to hear Him He is the Way the Verity and the Life none comes unto the Father but by Him On which words Chrysostom writes thus It is as if our Saviour had said I am the Way that is By me ye shall come The Verity because assuredly those things shall be which I have promised neither is any lie in me And the Life because Death cannot hinder you from me And since I am the Way ye need not another Guide Since I am Truth I speak no false thing Since I am Life although ye shall die ye shall injoy what I have promised And Cyrill Alexandr on the same words saith By three things we shall come into these Heavenly mansions by the action of true verity by right faith and the hope of eternal life of all which none is the giver none is the fountain nor is any the cause but our Lord Jesus Christ for he hath given commandments above the Law he hath shewed us the Way And he is also the Truth that is the true streightness and determination the uprightest rule and the best square of faith And he is also the Life for none but he can restore unto us that life which we hope shall be in holiness and blessedness without perishing He certainly shall raise us up though we die from that curse for sin and bring us into Heaven therefore all excellent things come and shall be unto us through him But those Worldlings say The Word of Christ is large and so many things are in it that we cannot search them Nevertheless He directs all men to search the Scriptures and the Evangelist teacheth that those are written that we might beleeve that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that beleeving we might have life through his name Yea in that written Word he hath certain rules and notes whereby the true Religion may be known Certainly that is the most true Religion which ascribes most glory unto God and most transcends the natural reason of men and most elevates the hearts and affections of men towards God and Heaven By application of those undoubted and unquestionable principles each one may understand that among all Religions the Reformed is the only true Religion for not only our Profession in the general but all the branches of our Doctrine are grounded on God's written Word and tend unto God's glory transcend our natural reason and lead men to think continually of God and to hope for blessedness in Heaven by Christ alone And amongst those who profess this Religion they are most devoted unto God and most constant in their profession who aim most at God's glory who are most acted by supernatural principles who do most think of God and whose hope of felicity in Heaven is most active And such as seek but their own or other mens interests or be led by political or human reasons mainly are the wavering Professors On the other side all other Religions though they pretend the glory of God they are not truly grounded on God's Word but are underpropped with natural reason and tend to earthly mindedness as appears by induction of the particulars wherein they differ from us some aiming at the advancement of mens abilities and others at worldly honour and gain This is clear in the Romish Religion for what else is the advancing of man's ability without or with a little help of God their Justification by works their Deifying of the Pope above all that is called God their equalling of Mens Traditions and Decrees with the Sacred Scriptures What else is their Mass their fancy of Purgatory c Here it is remarkable what is written by their Jesuit Cardinal Bellarmin de Indulg Lib. 1. Cap. 12. Sect. Rationes We see saith he that the amplest Indulgences are given for a very slight cause as when plenary Indulgence is given unto all who stand before the Door of St. Peter's Church and the Pope blesseth all the people solemnly And Sect. Observandum he saith That standing before St. Peter's Porch is a very light and slight cause if it be considered absolutely in it self and nevertheless it is a weighty and just cause because that frequency of the people at that time is a fit and usefull means of protesting their Faith concerning the Head of the Church and it serves for the honour of the Apostolical See which honour is the end of that Indulgence So he The Pope then and the People do aid one another mutually for the People confirms the Supremacy of the Pope by their presence and receiving that Indulgence and He by dispensing his
who are most holy have given unto your self what you have allowed unto me for who knows not that the Holy Church is strengthned by the solidity of the Prince of the Apostles because he carried strength of mind in his name that he was called Petrus à Petra to him by the voice of Truth it was said Unto thee will I give the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven and again When thou art converted strengthen thy brethren and again Simon lovest thou me feed my sheep And so though the Apostles were many yet only the See of the Prince of the Apostles which See is but one in three places and hath prevailed pro ipso principatu for he hath advanced the See where he would rest and finish his life and he hath beautified the See whereinto he sent the Evangelist a Disciple and he hath strengthned the See Antiochia in which he sate 7. years albeit he was to leave it Seeing then the See is one and of one wherein now by Divine authority three Bishops do govern whatsoever good I do hear of you I account it mine own and if you hear any good of me impute it unto your merits because we are all one in him who said That they may be all one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us So far he Whence it appears that whatsoever may be understood by the Title Prince of the Apostles other Bishops did oppose that it should be proper to the See of Rome and Gregory was content to share with the Bishops of Antiochia and Alexandria Likewise Basilius Bishop of Cappadocia in his 55. Epistle calleth Ambrose who was Bishop of Milain Bishop of the first See of the Apostles certainly not because any Apostle was ever Bishop of Milain but because as Ambrose held the doctrine of the Apostles so at that time Milain was the Court of the Emperour Theodosius his Residence as Basil saith in the same Epistle unto that Town is the Princedom of the whole Roman nation concredited The primacy of the Bishop of Rome being grounded in this manner upon so sandy reasons hath been usurped and enlarged by slight and might through many ages and at that time gave the occasion of the great schism betwixt the Greek and Latine Churches and among the Latines themselves for the Bishops of Ravenna and Milain would not consent to the supremacy as follows and therefore Ravenna in contempt was called Acephalos or headless and the Bishops of Venice and Istria would not subject themselves Phyl. Mornay in Myster iniq pag. 117. This Boniface denounceth a curse to all them who climb unto a Bishoprick by favour of men or bribery he ordaineth that The Election of a Bishop the Election of a Bishop should be by consent both of people and clergy and be ratified when the Prince of the City shall approve of it and the Pope shall add his volumus mandamus Platina Gregory said he would not command but only he would intimate or shew such things as he thought expedient lib. 7. Ep. 30. but then Boniface and all his Successors in all their Constitutions Grants and Buls have no word so frequent as Iubemus mandamus He sate 9. months 4. BONIFACE IIII. succeeds an 608. saith Onuphrius Phocas gave Paganisin creepeth into the Romish Church unto him the Temple that was called Pantheon that is of Cybele and all other Gods and he dedicated it unto Mary and all other Saints and therefore it was called Virgo ac Martyres Platin. A noble change not from Paganism to Christianity but from one sort of idolatry to another Neither was this his deed only but of many other Popes as Bellarmin sheweth de cultu Sanctor lib. 3. cap. 4. and therefore Agrippa de vanit scient cap. 58. saith we know this was the old superstition of the Gentils to build to each God their own Temple to whose imitation afterwards Christians began to dedicate their Churches unto their Divis. In that chapter Agrippa taxeth his Romanists 1. That they think God hears prayers more in one place than in another albeit Christ biddeth enter into our Chamber and he himself went unto the Mountaines to pray 2. Hee reproves the multitude of their Churches Chappels and Oratories built and adorned so sumptuously and in the mean time the poor and living members of Christ are starving for want of necessaries From Augustin contra Maximin lib. 1. argum 11. de Sp. San. we may learn a third fault of this kind if we build saith he a Church of Stones or Trees unto any most excellent Angel are we not accursed and anathematized from the truth of Christ and from the Church of God because then we give unto a creature that service which is due unto God only Hereunto did Bellarmin subscribe saying to offer Sacrifices to build Churches and Altars is a service due to God alone de beatit Sanctor lib. 1. cap. 12. But in lib. 3. de cultu Sanctor he varnisheth this practice of the Romish Church saying we build not Churches to our Martyrs as to Gods but as monuments to dead men whose spirits live with God He adds other answers but such as he trusts not himself and the most solid as he saith is Holy houses may be built truly and properly to Saints yet not under the name of a Church or Temple but Basilica or Memoria To omit the identity of the words Agrippa said before They build Churches unto their Divi and Erasmus on the margine above the fore-named words of Augustine hath marked This is done now to each one of the Divi. But experience is a sufficient witness that almost all the Churches under the obedience of Rome had their names from Saints nor were they called the Memories or Monuments but the Church of Saint Peter or some other Saint and in Latine Templa Sanctorum and in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Bellarmin witnesseth de cultu Sanct. lib. 3. cap. 4. Werefore we may see that the Church of Rome hath turned the old idolatry into a new sort of idolatry giving their new Gods more fine and superstitious worship This Boniface did first All-hallow day ordain the Feast of All-Saints and that the Pope should say Mass that day Catal. test verit lib. 6. He turned his fathers house into a Monastery and sate 7. years then the seat was vacant 6. months for many strove for the preheminence rather than for the cure of souls At last 5. DEUSDEDIT or Theodatus the son of a married Priest was chosen and sate 3. years This only is written of him that he was an holy man and that he healed a man sick of the Palsie by a kiss only and that he ordained that the son of him who had been witness of the Baptism of an infant should not marry that infant being a woman Platin. And hereby he enlargeth spiritual alliance as they call it which was begun by Gregory who
whether the name of the Catholick Church appartained to the Greeks or Latines ...... But now the Greek Church is diminished by oppression of the Turks as the Latine is increased by the Conquests of the Spaniards far otherwise then it was heretofore ..... So that if the multitude gave the name of Catholick the Grecians should have had it and the certain time when they lost this Title is not to be known Notwithstanding all this these two Churches and that of the Jacobites do profess themselves to be Catholicks the passages or proofs before alledged do shew that every one of them is extended very wide Under the name of Jacobites we comprehend the Cophites and Abyssines and we may add the Nestorians for Masius telleth us that these people are rather differing in name than in religion whose testimony is reported to be very true In Jerusalem they have divers Churches and Oratories the one neer the other and the reason is to the end every nation may use the language which he best understandeth ..... The same Masius dischargeth the Nestorians of the crime of that heresie which was imputed unto them I am assured saith he they are free from that wicked doctrine of that infamous heretick Nestor for having a great volumn of their solemn prayers which they make to God I have found nothing that might offend any man of sound opinion in our religion if it be not this that I suspect them because they in many places call not the Virgin Marie mother of God but instead of this Title they call her the mother of life and of light And saith the fore-named Author here is to be noted that Villamont had some notice that Prester-John had sent to the Pope that he was willing to submit himself unto the Church of Rome and Cotton the Jesuit affirms that the Patriarch of the Cophites had done the like But we have now fresher news and know that there is no such matter So far out of the Catholick Tradition Then of all these parts we may think that except certain persons at several times they all retain or the most part their ancient doctrines and traditions as wel in matters of faith as in rites and discipline except only the Western Church which hath suffered no small change sometimes to worse and sometimes to better not in general at once but now one nation and then another hath suffered their Eclipses and have shewed again their bright beams And the first declination began in Italy by occasion of Wars and partly in default of their Clergie For when the many strangers made incursions upon Italie in the two Centuries immediately preceding they indeavoured by all means to abolish all other languages except their own and therefore where they prevailed they burned Studies and all Books that they could find Io. Bodin Method cap. 7. And then the Bishops of Rome fishing in troubled waters after that the Emperour who did with-hold was taken out of the way they begun to exalt themselves above all The religion and pietie of former Bishops did move the Emperour to be bountifull unto them and for peace in the Church to limit their jurisdiction But the following Bishops looking unto wealth more than devotion and to dominion more than peace they begun to think a Bishoprick to be nothing else but gain revenues and dominion as saith Po. Vergil de inven rer lib. 6. cap. 14. neer the end in the former ages the subtile wits of the Greeks made heresies and heresies begot schisms but the Romans turn all religion into gain and in all the articles of difference betwixt the Greeks and the Latines the opinion of the Latines serveth unto the gain and ambition of the Clergie either directlie or indirectlie now desire of money being alone far more being conjoined with ambition is the root of all ill so that no wonder it is if hunting after it they have erred from the faith 2. Pope Gregory the I. saw this defection coming when he said all things Gregory foresaw the first defection that were fore-told are now in doing the King of pride is at hand and which I fear to speak the armie or the end Some read exercitus and some exitus of Priests is at hand for they do war under pride who should be ringleaders of humilitie lib. 4. Ep. 38. And on Iob lib. 33. cap. 36. now ere Antichrist come by himself some do preach him by their words and manie by their manners Are they not the Preachers of his hypocrisie who when they have obtained the holy Orders of God do with their hearts or desires lay hold on this fading World Who pretend that it is all vertue that they do and yet it is all vice that they practice And in Homil. on Luk. 10. he lamenteth Behold the World is full of Priests but few workmen in the Lords harvest we accept the Office but discharge not the work of the Office I think Brethren that there is no greater wrack then what God suffereth from Priests when he seeth them examples of wickedness whom he hath appointed for amending others and which is more grievous if they see one humble or continent they deride him What can befall the Flock when the Shepheards become Wolves they fear not to undertake the charge of the Flock who spare not to make prey of them and they turn Ministery into the increase of ambition we forsake the things that appartain unto God and are intangled with the things of the earth so it is fullfilled like Priest like people There he speaks largely of this purpose and this is remarkable that he saith When Peter shall come before Christ with the converted Jews whom he drew after him and Paul leading I may say the converted World Andrew leading Achaia and all the Shepheards with their Flocks shall come before the eternal Shepheard what shall we wretched men say who had the name of Shepheards and have no sheep who have received nourishment from us Nevertheless the Lord will feed his sheep by himself whom he hath appointed unto life Whereunto shall I liken bad Priests but to the water of Baptism which washing away the sins of the baptized sendeth them into Heaven and it is cast into a Cink And lib. 4. Ep. 32. he saith of them While we forsake things that become us and mind things that become us not we make our sins like unto the power of the barbarous enemies and our fault which lieth heavy upon the Common-wealth doth sharpen the swords of our enemies what can we say who are unworthily set over the people of God and press them down with the burthen of our sins who destroy by our examples what we preach with our tongues who by our works teach wickedness and by our voice only pretend equity the Teachers of humility and Captains of pride with the face of a sheep we do cover wolvish teeth But what shall be the end of these things but that we do counsel men and are
made known unto God And lib. 8. Ep. 36. They who come after us will see worse times so that in comparison of their times they will judge that we have had happy daies Yea Gregory not only foresaw Gregory deviseth new Rites yet tieth not others unto them this defection but he was not the least agent in multiplying new Rites he did frame a new order of Divine Service or as they call it a new Mass where it is clear that the former manner did not please him And li. 7. indict 2. Ep. 63. he shews that some of his friends both Greeks and Latines did grumble against it and in the end of that Epistle it is remarkable that he saith Nevertheless if that of Constantinople or any other Church hath any good I am ready to follow in goodness even my inferiours to whom I forbid unlawfull things for he is a fool who thinks himself chief and that he will not learn the good things that he seeth And when Augustine whom he sent into Britain did ask him seeing the faith is one why are the customes of the Churches diverse And why is one sort of Mass in Rome and another in France Gregory answers Thy Brother-hood knows the custom of the Roman Church in which you have been nourished but it pleaseth me that whether in the Church of Rome or of France or in any other thou hast seen any thing that may more please the Almighty God that thou diligently follow it and in that Church of the English which in respect of the Faith is new they ordain the best things that thou hast seen in many Churches for things are not to be loved for the places but the places must be loved for the good things therefore chuse thou out of every Church what things are godly pious and right and these being gathered into a bundle put thou into the minds of the English for customes Interrog August resp 3. Whence it is clear that although Gregory was the Authour of the Mass yet he did not bind all men to follow it nor any other Ceremonies In his answer to Augustin's sixth question he saith The holy Law forbids to uncover the filthiness Degrees of kindred of kindred therefore it is necessary now that the third and fourth degree may lawfully marry but should altogether abstain from the second Here he wresteth Scripture and restraineth the degrees which God permits Then Augustine asketh in his 7. question Whether those who are so unlawfully married shall be commanded to divorce and shall be denied of the Communion Gregory answereth Because many in that nation while they were infidels were mixed in that unlawfull marriage when they come into the faith they are to be admonished to abstain and let them know that it is an heinous sin let them tremble at the fearfull judgement of God lest for their carnal pleasure they suffer everlasting torments and yet they are not to be deprived of the Communion of the Holy Body and Bloud of the Lord lest we seem to revenge on them the things whereunto they had bound themselves in their ignorance before the Laurel of Baptism for at this time the holy Church correcteth some things in zeal suffereth some things in meekness dissembleth some things in prudence that oft by tollerance and connivance she may amend the ill which she hateth But all they who imbrace the faith are to be admonished that they do not such a thing and if they shall then do it they are to be deprived of the Communion of the body and bloud of the Lord. Here is a good advice in this but still he aimeth at his own conceit He deviseth a superstitious manner of consecrating Churches which the posteritie have changed he did foster the fond conceits of men by too credulous believing the false miracles of his time saith M. Canus in Theol. In Vita Gregor loc lib. 11. cap. 6. He praied for delivering the soul of Trajan out of Hell Pope Siricius who lived an 387. was the first who contradicted marriage of Priests and Deacons Gratian. dist 82. and forbad their societie with their wives whom they had married And Pope Pelagius did ordain that Deacons who had wives should either put them away or leave their Benefice Ibid. but then Pope Gregory judgeth it contrarie unto the Gospel to put away a wife unless it be for fornication and he ordained that no sub-Deacon should be admitted unless he promise chastitie and he thought by this means to bring single life upon the Clergie seeing they must be Deacons ere they be Priests Pol. Verg. de invent rer lib. 5. cap. 4. Nevertheless afterwards when he finds that Priests lived not continentlie and thereby many children were murthered as he saw 6000. heads of children taken out of a pond see hereafter in the 9. Centurie in the Epistle of Huldricus Bishop of Augusta he annulleth his own Act and saith It is better to marry then to burn and murther he was credulous of Purgatorie of which it follows For these and other conceits Gregory is called worse then any of his Predecessours but for his soundness in other articles and for his vertues worthy of praise he is commended above all his Successours for he taught far otherwise then the Church of Rome doth now In lib. 4. Ep. 40. he perswadeth Leander a Physician to diligent The faith of Gregory for matter of doctrine reading of the Scriptures and that upon such reasons that concern all men saying The Scripture is an Epistle sent from God to his creatures if thou receivest a Letter from an earthly King thou wilt not rest nor sleep till thou understandest it but the King of Heaven and God of Men and Angels hath sent his Letters unto thee for the good of thy soul and yet thou neglectest the reading of them I pray thee therefore study them and meditate daily on the words of thy Creatour And in the preface on Job unto Bishop Leander cap. 4. In the Scripture is milk for babes and meat for the stronger There is a river plain and deep wherein lambs may wade and Elephants may swim He hath the same again in Ezek. lib. 1. hom 9. in the end of this he saith whatsoever serves for edification and instruction is contained in the holy Scriptures In Iob lib. 19. cap. 17. The books of Maccabees are not Canonical Scripture and he permits an excuse of citing a testimony out of them to wit he doth not inordinately herein because they are written for edification albeit they be not Canonical Again lib. 5. cap. 7. he saith Our righteousness is found to be unrighteous when it is narrowly examined and it stinketh in the censure of the Judge which glistereth in the esteem of the worker And lib. 18. cap. 25. some rejoice in their own power and they do glory that they are redeemed by their preceding merits whose assertion certainly is contrary to it self for while they say They are innocent and redeemed
had made the death of Christ unprofitable unto themselves which certainly is horrible to be spoken and very lamentable seeing that death brought salvation unto many This was the mind of Basilius also and nevertheless we find in the Gospel That he might give his life a ransom for many to be expounded for all Cap. 10. Can never with these sacrifices which were offered year by year ..... If they being once offered had been available they should no more have been offered but when the oblation was made year by year and often it is clear that they were too weak for bringing salvation unto them who were desirous of it and therefore after the first offering followed another and again and again another for amongst Drugs that are called most valid and efficacious which being but once applied or drunken doth heal and cure but what must be often changed and applied hath the less vertue of healing and doth no good unto the sick But one may ask Do we not offer without blood Yea indeed but then we remember the death of Christ and we have but one oblation and not many seeing He is offered but once for we offer him continually or rather we remember his oblation even as if at this time He were sacrificed wherefore it is certain that we have but one sacrifice and the Law had many although as it is said before it was offered the oftner that it might be the more profitable unto many which nevertheless is far otherwise But our sacrifice as I have said is but one and once offered and continueth whole both in this life and that to come and it is more perfect for it is but one blood and once poured forth and one body although it was offered for many and it is not many as it is but one sacrifice which is offered for we do offer that continually as if it were present So far from Theophylact. But here some may object that Theophylact agreeth not with the Reformed Church in Theoph●lact is vindicated many particulars It is true and therefore I say often we must make separation of the dross from the pure gold but his difference is supposed to be greater then it is Porsena in his Epistle unto the Reader before the Gospels saith Theophylact follows Chrysostom concerning free-will and faith and some other things and therefore in expounding some places he is somewhat more violent which I say that herein you should use discretion which knowest thy self to be addicted unto the Canonical Scriptures only and not to scar thee from reading of him as some are wont when any passage displeaseth they throw the book away So say I in reading of any book written by man we who are addicted to the holy Scriptures only must use discretion But it seemeth Porsena speaks not this unto Papists because they are not addicted to the holy Canonical Scriptures only and he saith that Theophylact is more violent in expounding some places where certainly Porsena understands that he crosseth the Tenets of the Romish Church But this may be more clear by particulars 1. Porsena hath often marked the margine with liberum arbitrium as if Theophylact did in point of free will there assert the Romish errour concerning free-will and I know that others do alledge his testimony against the doctrine of the Reformed Church howbeit he speak nothing against us nor for them as is clear by inspection of particular places On Luk. 15. fol. 103. on the margine is Liberum arbitrium and in the line is The substance of man is rational whereupon followeth free-will for all rational creatures have a free-will and the Lord hath given them reason that they may use it freely c. It is clear that Theophylact speaks there of the nature of man absolutely or without any relation to any particular condition of man before the fall or after the fall and he speaketh against the Stoicks and Manicheans which did hold that the actions of men were carried by fate or pressing necessity and therefore it follows there If God would have us to be compelled he had not made us rational and of a free-will On Ioh. 6. at the words Will ye also go away he saith The Lord saith not Go ye away for this had been to repel them but he asketh will ye go away whereby he makes it free whether they will follow him or not and he sheweth that he will not have them to follow him in fear On these words also hath Porsena fixed Liberum arbitrium As also on Mat. 16. at the words If any will follow me he saith to the same purpose The Lord saith If any will to shew free-will and not coacted vertue These and many more places are clearly spoken against the necessity of fate or coaction which now is not controverted But if you ask By what power is an unregenerated man converted he hath said it already on 2 Cor. 4. and Eph. 1 and 2. Or if you ask By what power doth a regenerate man continue in the faith and practise of godliness Theophylact teacheth that on Phil. 2. at the words For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do Whereas he had said with fear and trembling now he saith that they need not fear for I have not spoken so that ye should despair but be the more wary for if ye take heed and be diligent God will make all perfect for it is he which makes you prompt to such a good will that we will good things and also bringeth such promptitudes of our mind unto an end for God worketh in us both the will that is he inableth you that ye desire good things and he will augment this good will and kindle it that it may be the more fervent ..... the Apostle takes not away free-will but willeth that we should alwaies give thanks unto God and committed all unto him Mark saith Theophylact but this manner of speaking he saith in you who work your salvation with fear and trembling for in such men which are willingly led unto good God worketh all things According to good will that is that it may be fullfilled in you what is acceptable unto God ..... for God will inable us to live rightly although it were no other cause but only this because so he willeth 2. It is objected that Theophylact and election by foreseen faith or works saith that election was made upon the fore-sight of faith and good works as on Eph. 1. it is When he saith He hath chosen he pointeth forth both the mercy of God and their vertue to wit whom God had separated as who were to be good I answer In these words Theophylact toucheth not the moving cause of election but only teacheth that God had chosen none but such as were to be good and godly and this he insists oft upon against them which held that faith or profession of faith is sufficient to salvation although men do not
words but they have done it wickedly as will appear hereafter 29. Gratian an Hetrurian and Monk of Bononia did out of the Canons The Canon Law of ancient Synods and decrees of Popes and sentences of Fathers and some forged writings of late Monks compile and amass the volume of the Canon Law which they call Decreta and Causae These were afterwards augmented by the Popes adding the Decretals and Extravagants and they are commented by the School-men Gratian took this work in hand in imitation of Lotharius the Emperor who had caused the Civil Laws to be digested into a method and he gathered these books so that by addition substraction or changing of a word or letter one or more he made all to serve the present times For example whereas Augustin de Doctr. Christ l. 2. c. 8. saith In Canonicis Scripturis Ecclesiarum Catholicarum quamplurium authoritatem sequatur inter quas sane illae sunt quas Apostolicae sedes habere epistolas accipere meruerunt Gratian Dist 19. c. In Canonicis hath them thus Inter quas Scriptur as Canonitas sane illae sunt quas Apostolica sedes ab ea aliae accipere meruerunt epistolas 2. In the sixth Councel at Carthage the Can. 165. saith Ad transmarina qui putaverit appellandum à nullo intra Africam in communione recipiatur This Canon speaketh absolutely and was made especially against appeals unto Rome But Gratian repeating it Caus 2. qu. 6. c. Placuit addeth Nisi forte Romanam sedem appellaverit 3. Pope Gregory lib. 9. epist 41. saith Scripsit mihi tua dilectio piissimum dominum nostrum speaking of the Emperor reverendissimo fratri meo Iohanni primae Iustinianae Episcopo pro agritudine capitis quam patitur praecipere succedi But Gratian Caus 7. qu. 1. c. Scripsit repeateth it thus Scripsit tua dilectio me reverendissimo fratri Iohanni pi Iust epis praecipere succedi 4. That common saying Petri successionem non habent qui Petri fidem non habent Gratian considering that hereby the succession of Peter might be called into question De poenit dist 1. c. potest saith Qui Petri sedem non habent Hear what a Papist judgeth of these Decrees Corn. Agrippa sometime Doctor utriusque Iuris in his Book De vanitat scient cap. 92. saith From the Civil Law hath flowed the Canon Law which may seem unto many to be very holy it doth so cover the precepts of covetousness and forms of robbing with the shew of godliness albeit very few things in it belong unto godliness religion or the worship of God besides that some things are contrary and fight against the word of God and all the rest are nothing but chidings pleas prides pomps gain or lucre and the pleasures of Popes which are not content with the Canons prescribed by the Fathers unless they do heap up Decrees Extravagants that there is no end of making Canons such is the ambition meer pleasure of Popes The School of Paris did openly detest and reprove this erroneous intolerable temerity I will not say heresie Out of these Canons and Decrees we have learned that the patrimony of Christ is Kingdoms donations foundations riches and possessions and that the Priesthood of Christ and primacy of the Church is Empire and Kingdom and that the sword of Christ is temporal jurisdiction and power and that the rock which is the foundation of the Church is the person of the Pope and that Bishops are not servants or Ministers of the Church but heads thereof and the goods of the Church are not the doctrine of the Gospel zeal of faith contempt of the world but tributes tithes offerings collects purples mitres gold silver jewels lands beasts authority it belongeth unto the Popes to manage battels break covenants loose oaths absolve from obedience and to make the house of prayer become a den of thieves so that a Pope may depose a Bishop without a cause he may dispose of other mens goods he cannot commit simony he may dispense against a vow against an oath and the law of nature nor may any man say unto him What doest thou yea and they say that for a weighty cause he may dispense against all the new Testament he may thrust down to hell a third part or more of Christian souls Agrippa in that place hath more of the matter and scope of the Canon Law and for instance I will name Dist 40. c. Si Papa If the Pope be found to neglect either his own salvation or his brethrens be unprofitable and slack in his office silent in that which is good hurtful to himself and all others yea though he lead with him innumerable people in troops to the first slave of hell yet let no mortal presume to finde fault with his doings And nevertheless in these Decrees we may finde not a few stops of Antiquity and some part of the doctrine and practise of the primitive Church even then remaining as I have touched in some places and more may be added as Dist 39. cap. 8. If as the Apostle saith Christ be the power of God and the wisdom of God and he which knoweth not the Scriptures knoweth not the wisdom and power of God then the ignorance of the Scriptures is the ignorance of Christ Dist 9. c. he saith from Augustine I have learned to give such fear and honor unto these books of the Scripture onely which now are called Canonical that I believe certainly none of their Authors could err in writing and if I finde any thing in them that seemeth contrary unto truth I doubt not but there is an escape in the Book or the Translator hath not attained the right meaning or that I do not understand it but I do read other books so that whatsoever was their holiness or learning yet I think it not true because they have thought so but because they could perswade me by other Authors or by the Canonical Scriptures or by probable reasons And Dist 8. cap. Si consuetudinem If you do object custom it is to be observed that the Lord saith I am the way the truth and life he saith not I am custom but I am truth and truly to use the words of blessed Cyprian whatsoever be the custom how old soever or common it be it must not in any respect be preferred unto truth and use which is contrary unto truth must be abolished Dist 16. c. Canones These that are called the Canons of the Apostles are known to be forged in the name of the Apostles by Hereticks although some good things be in them yet it is certain that they are not from Canonical or Apostolical Authority And c. Clementis All the Fathers do reckon the book of Clemens that is the travels of Peter and the Canons of the Apostles among the Apocrypha Dist 36. c. Si quis These be the two works of the high Priest to learn from God by reading the Scriptures and by frequent meditation
erroneously nameth one for another often c. By this ingenuous testimony of the Printer we may see what account they make now of their ancient Master and seeing these books have been so oft changed little credit can be given to any of their late Editions and thirdly that even the Master himself had not written soundly according to the Fathers which he citeth The Edition of Lombard at Paris An. 1550. hath in the end a catalogue of these which they call his errors in quibus Magister non tenetur I will shew some instances In the Edition at Lovane An. 1568. lib. 4. Dist 2. F. They who had not hope in the baptism of John and did believe the Father Son and holy Ghost were not baptised thereafter but the Apostles laid hands on them and then they received the holy Ghost Here on the margint it is Erronea Magistri opinio Dist 5. C. Christ might give unto them his disciples power to forgive sins yet not the same power that he himself had but a created power by which a servant may forgive sins yet not as the author of remission but as a servant and yet not without God the Author On the margin it is added Hic Magister non recipitur Dist 13. A. It may be truly said that the body of Christ is not eaten by the brute beasts albeit it seem so what then doth a mouse take and eat God knoweth In the margin it is said Non probatur haec Magistri opinio Dist 17. B. It may truly be said that without confession of the mouth and paying outward punishment sins are forgiven upon contrition and humility of the heart In the magin it is added Non rectè hic sentit Magister Dist 18. F. Unto the Priests he gave power of binding and loosing that is of shewing that they are bound or loosed In the margin it is Gravis Magistri lapsus In many other particulars though they have not put such a censure on him he is no less adversary unto the doctrine of Rome now as lib. 1. Dist 1. A. Let the diligent and modest speculation of Divines take heed to hold the Divine Scripture as the prescribed form in doctrine Dist 2. C. As Augustin lib. de Trini teacheth we must first shew whether faith hold out so according to the authority of holy Scriptures and then against babling disputers which are more proud then capable use Catholique reasons and fit similitudes for defense and asserting the faith that so satisfying curiosity we may the more fully instruct the modest or if they cannot finde the truth which they seek they may complain of their own minde rather then of the truth or of our assertion D. Therefore let us propound the Authority of the old and new Testaments Dist 40. D. Seeing predestination is the preparation of grace that is Divine election whereby he hath chosen whom he would before the foundation of the world as the Apostle saith on the other side reprobation must be understood the foreknowledge of the iniquity of some and the preparation of their damnation for as the effect of predestination is that grace whereby now we are justified and helped to live well and to continue in good and whereby we are blessed in the future so the reprobation of God whereby from eternity by not electing he hath rejected some is considered in two particulars whereof the one he foreseeth and prepareth not that is iniquity the other he foreseeth and prepareth that is everlasting punishment Whence Augustin ad Prosp Hilar. saith This rule must be held without wavering that sinners are foreknown in their sins and not prepared but that the punishment is prepared for God in his presence as Augustin in lib. de bono persever hath prepared his good things unto whom he would and unto whomsoever he giveth certainly he foresaw that he would give them Dist 41. A. If we seek the merit of obduration and mercy we finde the merit of obduration but we finde not the merit of mercy because there is no merit of mercy lest grace be made nothing if it be not given freely but rendered unto merits So he sheweth mercy according to grace which is given freely but he hardeneth according to judgement which is rendered unto merits whence we may understand that as God's reprobation is that he will not shew mercy so God's obduration is that he sheweth not mercy so that not any thing proceedeth from him whereby a man is made worse but onely it is not given whereby he may be better Hence it is clear saith he what the Apostle understandeth by mercy and hardening and because mercy admitteth not merit but obduration is not without merit and by the word mercy here is understood predestination and especially the effect of predestination but by the word obduration is not meant the eternal reprobation of God because there is no merit thereof but the privation or refusing of grace which is some way the effect of reprobation yet sometimes reprobation is taken for obduration as predestination for its effect which is grace given for grace which is given is the effect of predestination therefore seeing there are no merits of grace which is given to man for justification and far less of predestination it self whereby God hath from eternity chosen whom he would can there be any merits so nor of reprobation whereby from eternity he foresaw that some would be evil and be condemned as he did chuse Jacob and denied Esau which was not for their merits which they had then because they had none because themselves were not nor for the future merits which he could foresee did he either chuse the one or refuse the other In the next Section he sheweth how Augustin once thought that God had chuse Jacob because he foresaw that Jacob would be such and therefore Augustin recanted that error and he concludeth the Section thus Augustin in lib. de praedest sanctor saith Not because he foresaw that we would be such did he therefore chuse but that we might be such by the very election of his grace whereby he hath accepted us in his beloved Son Dist 46. B. Unto that objection from Matth. 23. 37. he answereth That is not to be understood so as if the Lord would have gathered the children and it was not done what he would because Jerusalem would not but rather that she would not have her children gathered by him and yet against her will he gathered her children even all whom he would because in heaven and on earth there be not some things that he would and doeth and some things that he would and doeth not but all whatsoever he would he hath done and therefore the meaning is whomsoever I have gathered by my ever efficacious will I did against thy will Behold it is clear that these words of the Lord are not contrary unto that is said Lib. 2. Dist 25. G. In man may be observed four estates of free-will for before
21. unto the King and Peers of France he saith Lift up your eyes round about hearken with your ears ye sons of men and behold the general scandal of the world lament the division of Nations and the general decay of justice and wickedness proceedings from the Elders of Babylon who heretofore seemed to rule the world but now they turn judgement into bitterness and the fruits of righteousness into wormwood In Epist 31. unto all Prelates he saith A Pharisee anointed with the oyl of wickedness above his fellows the Roman high Priest of our time sitting in the chair of perverse doctrine endeavoreth to destroy what is warranted from above he intendeth to eclipse the rays of our Majesty and turning truth into a fable he sendeth his Letters into divers parts of the world full of lyes accusing the purity of our faith at his pleasure and not with reason He who is a Pope by name onely hath written that we are the Beast rising out of the Sea full of the names of blaspemy and we do aver that he is the Beast of which it is said Another red horse came out of the Sea and he who sitteth upon him taketh away peace from the earth for from the day of his promotion that father not of mercies but of discords a diligent procurer of desolation not of consolation hath turned all the world into scandals and to use his own word in the right sense he is the great Dragon who deceiveth all the world he is the Antichrist whose forerunner he calleth us he is another Balaam hired for a reward to curse us he is the Angel coming out of the bottomless pit having the vials full of bitterness c. By these few passages it may appear what good and learned men have thought of the Pope 13. In the first Book of Epistles written by the now named Petrus de Vineis Philip King of France his Letter to the Cardinals the 34. is in name of Philip King of France directed unto the Cardinals concerning the election of the Pope there he saith What provoketh them unto discord greediness of gold and ambition for they think not what is expedient but what they would have they make more account of their particular interest then the publique and wickedly prefer their gain unto honesty how then shall they rule others who cannot rule themselves who hurt their friends and do good to their enemies and in the end catch nothing unto themselves The Court of Rome was wont to be glorious in knowledge maners and vertue and were not provoked with the menaces of fortune because they thought they were safest under the protection of vertue then of chance but now it cannot be called Curia sed cura a Court but care they love a mark of money better then Mark 's Gospel a salmon better then Solomon they love honor and eschew a burthen they love to be advanced but neglect the profiting of their subjects in piety such cannot be called shepheards but rather impious wolves by whose perfidiousness the holy Mother the Church is trod under foot faith is undone hope is put away and love is pulled up by the roots 14. In the year 1253. was great contention between the Masters of Sorbon Contestation of the Sorbonists against the Minorites in Paris and the preaching Friers who were so increased in number and honor becoming the Confessors and Counsellors of Kings that they would not be subject unto the former Laws and Customs The School-men conveened and were content to want somewhat of their weekly portion to satisfie the Court of Rome from which the Friers had obtained their priviledges or as Mat. Parisien in Henri IV. speaketh their horns after the wasting of a great deal of money and much travel bestowed on both sides some Customs of the University were changed and a kinde of agreement was made In the next year the contention was hotter and the Friers would multiply their number in despite of the University and City the King and City would have preserved the Custom of the School but the Friers had more favor with the Pope because of their great service unto the Court and they carried the victory and the Pope ordained that they might teach Divinity without account of the former order concerning the number In time of this contention the Friers published a book with the title of The eternal Gospel whereof John de Parma an Italian Monk was said to be the Author The eternal Gospel On the other side four Masters of the University set forth another Of the danger of the last times one of the four was William de Sancto Amore and therefore the Friers called the favorers of that book Amoraei In this book the Masters say Now there be fifty five years since some have attempted to change the Gospel of Jesus Christ into another Gospel which they call the Gospel of the holy Ghost and when he cometh the Gospel of Jesus Christ shall be abolished as we are ready to prove by that accursed book Ia. Vsser in his book De Eccles succes cap. 9. ex Henr. Erphurd Chron. cap. 39. and Nic. Eimeric direct Inquisi par 2. qu. 9. sheweth some passages of that cursed Gospel 1. The eternal Gospel is better then the Gospel of Jesus Christ and all the Old and New Testaments 2. The Gospel of Christ is not the Gospel of the Kingdom and therefore it cannot edifie the Church 3. The New Testament is to be annulled as the Old was annulled 4. The New Testament shall continue in power but for six years next to come to wit until the year of incarnation 1260. 5. They who live after that year shall be in the estate of perfect men 6. Another Gospel shall succeed unto the Gospel of Christ and another Priesthood unto his Priesthood 7. None are simply fit to teach men in spiritual and eternal things but such who walk bare-foot c. Many other Articles are in that place now cited The people began to dispise the Friers refused to give them alms and called them hypocrites successors of Antichrist false prophets flatterers and wicked counsellors of Kings and Princes contemners and supplanters of their Ordinaries defilers of Royal beds abusers of confessions c. Mat. Paris ad An. 1256. where it is also written that both those parties sent their Commissioners unto the Court at Anagnia both the books were censured and Pope Alexander ordained that the book of the eternal Gospel should be burnt but privily and so far as might be without discredit of the Friers But the Pope was the more offended at the other book because it was written against the religious Friers therefore he published a Decree to this this purpose Some professing to have the knowledge of the Scriptures but straying from the way of the true sense have plotted wickedness and have uttered very great iniquity against the innocent and upright they have reviled their brethren and laid stumbling blocks before
the Danube near unto Frioli in Italy and on the North he marcheth with Poland and Muscovy In Affrick his ditions are for the most part barren except most fertile Aegypt This Empire is now governed by twenty Bassaws of which three are in Europe the most potent is in Greece another in Hungary and the third in Temisnara in Asia are thirteen three in Affri●k and one in Cyprus Cumin Ventura in Relatio de Vrbe Constantinop Wheresoever they prevailed they either slue all the inhabitants or led them away in such misery that they lived so that death had been more tolerable Bathol Georgueviz lived amongst them the space of 13. years about the year 1540. and returning writ a book Deploratio Christianorum which was printed at Wittemberg An. 1560. there he saith If any man had foreknown that calamity they would rather have chosen to have died a thousand times if in any place death be mixed with life or if life be prolonged that men may be long a dying it is under the Turks the bondage in Aegypt the captivity in Assyria and exile in Babylon are light in comparison of this most grievous oppression for whether Christians do submit unto them or not it is all one if these prevail as in their promises is no fidelity so is no mercy in their victory they kill all the Nobility and scarcely spare any of the Clergy they throw down all the Churches or turn them to their blasphemous superstition leaving unto Christians old Chappels which when they decay it is permitted to rebuild for a great sum of money neither are Christians permitted to have any audible sign of assembling but only as it were by stealth to exercize their religion neither may a Christian bear Office in any Province or City nor carry a weapon if any blasphemy be spoken against Christ or contumely against a Christian he must hold his peace but if thou speak against their Mahumet the punishment is fire or if against their religion thou shalt be circumcized If a Christian on horseback do meet a Turkish Priest he must come down and with low courtesie salute the Priest Every Christian now must pay the fourth part of all his increase as well of their Corns and Bestial as of their handy-work and every Master of a family paieth a ducate yearly for every person of his family if the Parents have it not to pay they must sell their children and others are compelled to beg it or they are condemned to perpetual prison and still it is free unto the Turk to take the most handsom of the Christian children and circumcize and bring them in their Cloisters to be Seminaries of his Janizaries or guard and of his Souldiers so that they hear not of Christ nor Parents yet many of these Janizaries carry under their arm pits a New-Testament in Greek or Arabick From amongst the fairest of the Christian daughters the great Turks hath his Wives and Concubines and it is religion unto them to do otherwise So that by custom or contempt of the old Turkish blood the present Emperours and Janizaries and Bassaws are descended of the Christians Both the Christians and the Janizaries in these Provinces do heartily wish the revenging Sword of Christians to deliver them from their wofull thraldom and the Turks stand in fear of it because of such a prophesie amongst them Georgieviz de affectione Christianor The multitude of the Turks are base minded being destitute of all learning for their Laws forbid Schools and they live most by Pasturage Euphorm in Icon. animor cap. 9. This brief glance of the power and tyranny of the Turks is usefull for understanding some passages of the Scriptures as also to move others unto compassion and praiers for the Christians whose troubles we know not and to make us the more thankfull for our tranquility and liberty and more patiently to bear sickness a little penury or if it were banishment for Christ's sake c. which light things many do impatiently undergo because they know not the heavy crosses of other Christians Yea and for cleering the justice of God in all these heavy burthens of Christians it may be marked out of Nicep Gregoras and Chalcocondylas their Histories that though these Greeks were very constant both in the Doctrine and Rites of their Antients yet amongst their Nobility were manifold divisions and strifes amongst their Clergy great ambition and contention and especially they complain of the wretchlessness of the Emperours and the infinite Taxes which they exacted of the people so that many did even before the loss of Constantinople chuse to live under the Turks and the rather because at that time the Turks dealt fairly with the Christians that would come and dwell in their Towns and proffered them liberties and it was upon occasion of these grievances that some Greeks came into Italy and Germany in the beginning of that Century CHAP. IV. Of BRITAIN 1. WHilest King Richard was living in prison Henry the IV. was Crowned King of England An. 2. chap. 3. he ordained that if any person should obtain from the Bishop of Rome any provision to be exempt from obedience regular or ordinary or to have any Office perpetual in any house of Religion he should incur the pains of Praemunire And chap. 15. He gave authority unto Bishops and their Ordinaries to imprison and fine Civil power of coaction g●ven to Bishops who exerce it cruelly all Subjects who refuse the Oath ex Officio Here by the way I add that in the Parliament of King James An. 1610. Stat. 1. it is said Whereas the Temporal Sword was never in the Prelates power untill the 2. of Henry the IV. and then usurped by them without consent of the Commons for say They were truly Ecclesiastical yet it is against the Laws of God and of the Land that they should meddle with civil jurisdiction therefore is an Act past against it and the Oath Ex Officio In the same Parliament of Henry the IV. it was ordained that all Lollards that is who professed the doctriue which Wickliff had taught should be apprehended and if they should remain obstinate they should be delivered to the Bishop of the Diocy and by him unto the correction of the Secular Magistrate to be burnt This Act was the first in this Island for burning in case of Religion and began to be put in execution the same year 1401. and Thomas Arundel Arch Bishop of Canterbury swore that he would not leave a slip of the Lollards in the Land At that time did suffer William Sawtree a Priest William Swinderby Richard White William Thorp Reinold Peacock once Bishop of Saint A●●ph and then of Chicester Io. Fox in Acts Mon. Many errours were imputed unto them maliciously but as Ph. Morn in Myster pag. 495. shews ex Walsing in Hypodeig they held no other doctrine but of the Waldenses George Abbot contra Hill in answer to the first reason sec 25. shews that
God and triall thereof of whom wee have experience that they do minister truly according to the institution of our Saviour And now Madam the Bishop of Santandrews by the corrupt Counsell of most wicked and ungodly persons hath given forth his letters of summons against our Ministers to compear in Santandrews or otherwhere such day as he hath appointed in his letters the copy whereof being required was refused to underly the most corrupt ●udgement of them whose Counsell in this cause he doth most follow And knowing how dangerous a thing it is to enter under the judgement of enemies wee can not suffer them to enter under their hands nor to compeare before them unless they be accompanied with such as may be able to defend them from the violence and tyranny where of wee have now experience But to stop all tumults and other inconvenients that may thereby occurre wee most humbly offer ourselves and Ministers to come before your Grace and Counsell to abide tryall in all things that they have to lay unto the charge of us and our ministers according to the word of God Beseeching your Grace as you ought of duty and as you are placed of God above his people take our cause or rather the cause of God to be tryed most justly according to the holy Scriptures before yourself and put inhibition to the said Bishop to proceed further untill tryall be taken as said is Unto the which your Gr. shall find us at all times ready as shall please you to command and your Gr. good answer wee most humbly beseech Another step of the first publik Reformation in Scotland This supplication had no answer as they did expect Then the Counsell conveening they did agree to hazard their lives and estates in advancing the cause of Religion and after deliberation what were fittest first to do they conclude these articles 1. that in all parishes the Curate should be caused to read the prayers and Lessons of the old and new Testam on sundays and festivall days conform to the book of Common prayers and if the Curate be not qualified or refuse another shall be chosen to do the same 2. preaching and interpretation of Scriptures shall be used only in private houses after a quiet manner untill God shall move the Queen to grant further liberty It was performed accordingly in many towns and parishes to the great offense of the clergy who complain unto the Regent and were answered that it is no fit time to enter into these matters but ere long she wil find occasion to put order unto them Archbald Earle of Argile had been in the Councell at the making of these Acts and the Bishop of Santandrews sent a letter unto him shewing the perill whereinto he casts himself by that open defection from the Church willing him to rid himself of that defamed and perjured Apostat John douglas whom the Earle had chosen to be his Minister and offering to provide unto him a learned and wise Preacher for whom he would lay his soule in pawne that he shall teach no other but true doctrine and agreeable to the Catholick faith The Earle answered he feared no perill to himself nor his house having resolved to live in obedience to his Prince and to serve God al●well as he could according to his word as for the alledged defection seing it hath pleased God to open his eies and give him the knowledge of his truth which he takes as a token of his favour he will not forsake it for fear of any inconvenients and that man he had named he had heard him teach the doctrin of Christ condemne idolatry adultery fornication and the like vices as he is ready to give account whensoever he shal he cited but to call him defamed and perjured there was no reason seing he was not declared to be such by any Sentence and if formerly he had taken any unlawfull oath he had done much better in forsaking it than if he had observed it and whereas he had profered unto him some learned man he gave him thanks seing is so great necessity of labourers in the Lord's harvest but he understood his meaning and minded not to be led with such teachers In end he wished he would not beginne the battell with him whereof the event may be doubtfull but that he knew God is God and shall bee still whatsoever the craft of man can work or devise The Bishop receiving this answer communicates it unto the chief of the clergy who began to think upon other defenses and they summon some Ministers to compear at Edinburgh the 20 of July especially Paul meffan Preacher 〈…〉 So many people did conveen that the Bishops thought best ●●●delay all process except that they condemned the absents and summoned them to compear on September 1. with promise of pardon if they will recant their errours Buchan hist lib. 16. The feast of S. Giles was then approaching for the custom was on Septemb. 1. to carry the image of their Pa●●●●-Saint through the town with drums trumpets and other musicall instruments and to envite nighbours unto feasting and great drinking At that time the Clergy did entreat the Regent to honour the solemnity with her presence and she fearing some tumult consents to accompany the procession but when the time of solemnity was come the image could not be found This made a stay till another little image was brought from the Gray Fri●rs the people in mockery called it young S. Giles They go-on with this and the Regent went with them till the procession was nigh ended So soon as she went to dinner some young men drew neer making shew to help the bearers and perceiving by the motion the image was fixed to the Fertor they threw all to the ground then taking the image by the heels they dash it against the stones untill they break it into pieces the priests and friers runne away to make shew of violence but when no danger did appeare they come to the striet again And albeit the clergy were out of all hope to stand yet to put the fairest face on their condition they conveen and delay their censuring untill November 7. In the mean time who were most foreward for Reformation went through out the Shires exhorting all men to take the Reformation to heart and that they would not suffer themselves nor friends to be oppressed by a few priests and assuring them of victory if the cause be handled legally or if violence be vsed they shall not be inferiour Vnto so many who were willing they offered a bonde to subscribe which they had drawn up conforme to the act of the Councell The subscribers were called The Congregation which name became more famous In November a Parliament for articles of the marriage betwixt Francis Daulphin of France and Queen Mary was to be conveened then they knowing by the return of the subscriptions that the Countrie for the most part was enclined that way resolve to make
expedient unto his See to send unto the Legats they consider the precedents of other faculties and dare fallow none of them at last a Bull was framed with this clause He sends them as Angels of peace unto the councel and gives them full authority to preside there to ordain whatsoever Decrees to hear propound conclude and to execute whatsoever were necessary for the honor of God and increase of the Catholick faith to REFORM the estate of the Catholick Church in ALL her members ecclesiastical and Secular of whatsoever preheminence though graced with Pontifical or Royal dignity and to do any thing fit for extirpation of heresies and for reducing them who have departed from obedience of the Apostolicall See for preservation and restoration of ecclesiastical liberty with condition that in all thing they proceed with consent of the Councel Then calling to mind what encounters befell unto Pope John in Constance when he sent his Nuntij unto the councel of Pavia he sent unto the Legats a privat Breve with authority to prolong dissolve or transfer the councel unto what place they shall please This was a designe to cut off all contrary purposes unto him The Legats arrive at Trent March 13. but found no Prelats there excep the Cardinal of Trent after ten dayes Orators came from the Emperour and Venice to assist the Synod then came the Cardinal of Madruccio and three Bishops On the first day of their arriving the Legats granted indulgence unto all there present for three years and so many fourty dayes Then they consider their Bull of faculties and with resolution to keep it secret they sent advice unto Rome that the condition annexed in the end of it did ty their hands and made every petty Prelat equal unto them Their reason is thought good and another was sent giving them absolute authority After this was seen they profess to communicat their most inward thoughts unto the Ambassadors and Prelats wherefore when Letters came from Germany or Rome they all assembled together in the lodging of one But the Legats advise the Pope that upon every occasion one Letter should be written for common view and the secret designes should be written apart T●e first doubt was for precedency whether Don Diego the Emperours Ambassador or the Cardinal of Trent should have the first place at last it was agreed that their chaires be set so that none may know which of the two were preferred The next scruple was for opening the Councel on the one side it moved them that no Prelats were come but four and on the other side the fear of the Turkish warrs required hast The Pope sent resolution to open the councel on the first day of May without longer delay on that day the Legats shew that they had received commission to open but shew not the particular day only They held a congregation which was spent on ceremonies that the three Legats should have a like apparel and ornaments that the place of Session should be adorned wich hangings of Arras whether seats should be prepared for the Pope and the Emperour whether Don Diego should have more honorable place then other Ambassadors whether the Elector-Bishops being Princes should sit before other Bishops and archbishops and it should prejudge no man if they have not their own place at this time Before May was ended twenty Bishops were come and five Generals of Monks they were also soon wearied with expectation and would have returned but were entertained by the Legats with hope of opening the Counsel shortly Don Diego would not stay longer and upon pretence of ●ndisposition he went to Venice In the end of Juny some Prelats complained grievously untill a supply of 40. Ducats was promised unto them Some obiected that their staying was like to have no effect because the Emperour was medling with Religion and to that end had appointed Colloquies therefore sundryes withdrew themselves pretending several causes The Pope considering that the Emperour held things in suspence and affected not the councel if he might atchieve his own designements in Germany began to condem himself that he had proceeded so far and yet it seemed scandalous to dissolve so small a convention and on the other side he judged it clear that a Synod was a fit remedy against the heresies as he spake and he feared that the Emperour would crave an halfyears fruits and vassalages of the monasteries in Spain as also what might be the event of that Colloquy in time of the Counsel While he thus is wavering he resolves and sends unto the Legats a Bull of faculty to transfer the councel to the effect he may drive off time at least And also he sent the Bishop of Caserta unto the Emperour craving either to begin the councel or suspend it or to transfer it into Italy The Emperour would yeeld to none of the three In the end of October he yeelds to open the councel but so that they begin with Reformation of the Clergy and medle not with points of doctrin lest the Protestants be incensed This course was thought at Rome to favour the hereticks and to curb the Papal power Nevertheless they will not seem to take it ill and ordaines the first Session to be held December 13. and to handle principally matters of doctrin and if a reason must be rendered it should be answered To entreat of Reformation of manners only were contrary unto all former examples On December 12. a congregation was held and the Prelats consulted what is to be done in the Session The Bishop of Estorga said The Legats should read their Bull and all the others consented The Legat De Sant Cross considering that the publishing of their large authority might breed danger of limitation answered In the Councel all are one body and therefore it were necessary to read the Bull of every bishop to shew their institution from the Apostolick See and this were tedious seing more are coming So that motion was put off When the. 13. Day was come the Pope published at Rome a B●ll of Jubilee declaring that the opening of the councell was to cure the wounds of the Church done by hereticks and exhorting every one to assist the assembled Fathers with their prayers and for this effect they should confess themselves and fast three dayes in which time they should go in processions and receive the blessed sacrament and he granted pardon of all sin unto all that did so The same day at Trent the Legats caused a large admonition to be read shewing that it is the duty of every one during the councel to advertise the Prelats of all occurrents and declaring the three ends of the councell to wit extirpation of heresy reformation of Ecclesiastical disciplin and regaining of common peace whereof the first and last inconvenients were the effects of the second for it can not be denyed that the people as saith the Prophet have committed two evils they have forsaken the fountain of living
established in the Session In this manner they debate of Lectures and Sermons but no draught of article could be devised to please them all for the Prelats would curb the liberty of Friets and have them to depend on the Bishops but the Legats Of Sermons stood for the liberties granted by the Popes especially unto the Mendicants In this contention the Legats sent complaint unto Rome namely against Bracius Marcellus Bishop of Fisole and against the Bishop of Chioza craving that those two should be removed from Trent The Pope answered He will send order in convenient time concerning these two as for matters if they regard the petitions of Princes the Synod shal be confused and the resolutions shall be hard therefore they should proceed in orginal sin he forbids the Deputies to proceed in correcting the Vulgar Translation untill those in Rome had determined of their course The Legats obey the last point but fearing that the Imperialists would leave the Synod they treat in two congregations concerning the reforming of Sermons and the philosophical part of them decrees were framed as giving way unto the Bishosps yet so cunningly that the Friers had liberty still Then they come Of original sin to original sin The Imperialists said The Synod was assembled principaly to reduce Germany and the articles of difference can not be known but only unto him that sits at the stern of Germany therefore it were expedient to crave by Letters the opinion of the principal Prelats of that Nation or the Pop●s Nuntio should speak of this with the Emperour The Legats commend the advice but intending to follow their instruction say They will inform the Nuntio and in the mean while articles may be gathered out of their books and debated for gain of time The Imperialists were ●atiffied hoping to put off the Sommer ere any thing were concluded So new articles were propounded as drawn out of Lutheran books but for the most part they were calumnies as the contradictory canons do shew The Divines would not speak of them in that order as they were propounded but spake first of Adams transgression what sin it was here how many heads so many opinions Then they enquired what is that sin derived from Adam Some alledging the authority of Augustin said It is concupiscence others following Anselm said It is the want of orginal righteousnes others conioyned them both and those were again divided some following Bonaventura gave the first place to concupiscence because it is positive others after Aquinas held that concupiscence is but the material part And because John Scotus had followed Anselm the Franciscans stood for his opinion They were more troubled about the propagation of it but all agreed that it is not by imitation only In the fourth place they all held that inclination to ill is not a sin Yet here the Franciscans fell upon their cardinal controversy with the Dominicans the Franciscans would have the blessed Virgin excepted expressly and the Dominicans would not Cardinal de Monte had much adoe to divert them from this point They all agree in the remission of original sin that it is taken away by baptism and that the soul is restored into the estate of innocency by an infused quality which they called original grace albeit the punishment do remain for exercise of the just Only Antonius Marinarus did oppose saying Concupiscence remaining in them who are baptized is verily a sin in itself but it is not accounted sin in them because it is covered with the righteousnes of Christ Soto joyned with him therefore others calling to minde that lately in a Sermon he had condemned all trust in works and had called the best works of the famous heathens splendida peccata he was suspected to be a Protestant They held the punishment of this sin to be only the want of blessednes excep Gregorius Ariminensis he alledged the authority of Augustin and therefore was called a Tormenter of children When the Bishops heard so many controversies among the Divines they knew not what to decern only they would condem the articles as they were propounded Marcus Viguerius Bishop of Sinigaglia Jerom General of the Augustinians and Vega a Franciscan said They can not condem an opinion as heretical unless they first declare what is trueth But the Prelats made no account of their words and were out of all hope to determin those school-points to the contentmen of all parties So they frame five canons and so many anathema's but the Dominicans and Franciscans could not be satisfied in the point of excepting the blessed Virgin untill direction was brought from Rome that they should not touch doctrines which may foster schism amongst themselves Then they were both stilled so that opinions be not preiudged Therefore it was added in the Decree They have no mind to comprehend the blessed Virgine and the Pope added The constitution of Sixtus 4. should be observed So whether the Imperialists would or not the fifth Session was held Iuny 17 the five decrees of doctrin and one having two parts concerning the reforming of Lectures and Sermons were read and the sixth Session was appointed to July 29. V. In the congregation it was propounded to speak first of justification Session 6. The Imperialists would delay it for the above named reasons but three Bishops and three Divines were named to frame articles In the congregation for reformation the residence of Pastors and Prelats was set a soot Concerning justification 25. Articles were brought some of works done before justification some of works after it and some of the essence of Of justification grace At the first none of the Divines knew what to say because the School-men had not handled that matter as the other of original sin untill they had ghessed about and then the Franciscans following Scotus said Works done by power of nature only deserve before God by way of congruity and God were uniust if he give not grace to the man who doth what he can The Dominicans following Thomas say No kind of merit goeth before grace and the very beginning of good works should be ascribed unto God as indeed congruous merite was never heard in the Church even when they had most to do against the Pelagians Concerning the works of grace all held that these are perfect and do merite salvation In the point of the essence of grace it was a common consideration that the word Grace in the first signification signifieth benevolence which in him who hath power brings forth necessarily a good effect and that is the gift which is also called grace They say The Protestants think so meanly of Gods Majesty that they restrain the word Grace unto the first signification And because some might say God can bestow no gift greater then his Son they said That benefit is common unto all men and it is fit he should bestow a particular benefite on severall persons and this is habituall grace or a spiritual quality
Whether free-will be loosed by sin many passages were brought from Augustin to the affirmative So to answered There is a liberty of necessity and another from servitude and Augustin speakes of this This difference was not understood and so Luther was said not worthy of blame in the tittle of his book Of servile will Many thought the fourth article absurd Man hath free-will to do ill only for said they free-will is a power to both contraries But they were made to acknowledge their error when they heard that the good Angels have power to do good only In examining the 5. and 6. articles concerning the consent of the free-will unto Divine inspirations or preventing grace the Franciscans strove that the will is able to prepare itself and hath more power to accept the Divine prevention when God gives assistance then before when it acteth by strength of nature The Dominicans denyed that works preceeding our calling are truly preparatory and they gave the first place unto God But these were at variance among themselves So to held Albeit a man can not obtain grace without the special prevention of God yet the will may ever some way refuse and when the will accepts it is because it gives assent and if our assent were not required there were no cause why we are not all converted for God stands ever at the door and gives grace unto every one who will have it to say otherwise were to take away the liberty of the will and as if one would say God useth violence Aloisius a Catanea said God worketh two sorts of preventing grace as Aquinas teaches one sufficient and the other effectual the will may refuse the first but not the other for it is a contradiction to say Efficacy can be resisted And he answered unto the contrary reasons All are not converted because they are not efficaciously prevented The fear of everting free-will is removed because things are violently moved by a contrary cause but not by their own cause but seing God is the cause of the will to say The will is moved by God is to say The will is moved by itself And God converts albeit man will not or spurn at him and it is a contradiction to say The effect spurneth against the cause It may happen that God effectually converts one who before had spurned against sufficient prevention but afterwards he can not because when gentleness is in the will the efficacy of Divine motion must nieds follow yet so that the will followes not as a dead or unreasonable creature but it is moved by its own cause as reasonable and followes as reasonable Soto replied Every Divine inspiration is only sufficient and that whereunto free-will hath assented obtaines efficiency by that consent without which it is not effectual not by defect of itself but by defect of the man or else it would follow that the separation of the elect from the reprobate were from man and this is contrary unto the perpetual doctrine of the Church that vessels of mercy are separated by grace from them of wrath Each party thought their own reasons invincible and admonished the other to take heed that they leap not beyond the mark by too earnest desire to condem Luther Here the Legate had occasion to wave any conclusion by propounding the question Whether Divine election bee by foreseen works So it was ordained to collect articles of this matter Of Election In the books of Luther they found nothing worthy of censure out of the books of Zuinglius they drew 8. articles 1. Predestination and reprobation are only in the will of God The most part judge this to be Catholik and agreeing with Thomas and Scotus because before the creation God of his meer mercy hath out of the common masse elected some unto glory for whom he hath prepared effectual means of obtaining it their number is certain and others who are not chosen can not complain for God hath prepared for them sufficient means albeit only the elect can or shall be saved to this purpose they cited the examples of Jacob and Esau and the similitude of the potter Rom. 9 and the conclusory words of the Apostle there and 1. Cor. 3 5 4 7 2. Tim. 2 19 c. Others called this hard and inhumane as if God were partial if without any motive he choose one and not another or he were unjust if of his only will and not for mens fault he created so great a multitude unto damnation and it destroyes free-will because the elect can not finally do evill nor can the reprobate do good it casts a man into dispair it gives occasion of bad thoughts in not caring for pennance for men think if they be elected they can not perish They confessed not only that works are not the cause of Gods election because it is before them but also that works foreseen can not move God to predestinat because he is willing in his infinit mercy that all should be saved and for this cause he prepares sufficient assistance for all and this grace man acceptes or refuses as he listeth but God in his eternity foreseeth both who will accept this help and who will reject it and He rejectes these and chooseth those The first opinion keeps the mind humble and not relying on itself but on God and the other is more plausible and being grounded on humane reason prevailed more but when the testimonies of Scripture were weighed it was manifestly overcom For resolving the passages of Scripture Catarinus propounded a midle course God of his goodnes hath elected some few whom he will save absolutly and unto them he hath prepared infallible and effectual means he also desireth for his part that all others be saved and hath provided sufficient means for all leaving it to their choice to accept or refuse amongst those some few accept and are saved albeit they were not elected and others will not cooperate with God and are damned it is the only good will of God that the first are saved and that the second sort are saved it is their acceptation and cooperation with Divine assistance as God has foreseen and that the last sort are reprobated it is their foreseen perverse will the number of the first is determined but not the second and according to this distinction the different places of Scripture are understood diversly He said he wondered at the stupidity of them who think the number to be certain and yet others may be saved and also of them who say Reprobates have sufficient assistance for salvation and yet a greater assistance is necessary to him who is saved then said he the first is a sufficient insufficient or an insufficient sufficiency The second article was The elect can not be condemned nor the reprobate be saved The different opinions of the first caused diverse censures of this Catharinus held the first part true in respect of his first sort of men and the other part false in
other his works I therefore subjoyn a taste of it and because some poison is in it I add a litle antidot which may be usefull unto some In his preface unto the Emperour he shewes his Rule of judging the evangelical and Apostolical Scripture which being Divine and a most sure rule the antients had used in judging of controversies after the departure of the Apostles and because in such contentions ariseth controversy about the interpretation and sense of some passages of the Scriptures it is necessary to have recourse unto the Universall consent of Writers chiefly of those who lived in the time of the Emperour Constantin untill the time of Leo I. or of Gregory yet so that it is not necessary to produce the testimonies of them all nor of the most part which were an infinite work but it is sufficient to bring one or two by whom the judgement of the whol Church may be known and with this caution that every testimony of those Fathers may not be rashly received seing in many places they speak according to their privat judgement and wherein even the most learned and best maintainers of the Apostolical and Catholick doctrine have not agreed with the safe unity of faith but only such things as belong unto the confirmation of the Apostolical and Catholick tradition and have the weight of irrefragable and undoubted testimony wherein they declare constantly the publick and common faith of the whole Church His method is conform unto the Articles of the Augustan Confession His principal scope seemes to be contained in the seventh Article de vera Ecclesia where he holdes that the true Church is always manifest and though the present Roman Church hath departed from the primitive not a little in integrity of manners and discipline yea and in sincerity of doctrine yet she standes on the same foundation and professeth communion with the antient Church and therefore is one and the same albeit different in many particulares Neither should we separate from her as Christ did not separat from the Jewish Church albeit corrupt neither did the Prophets nor Apostles violate the union but only spake against her and came out of her but by dissenting from the errors neither did Cyprian and some others violat the union with the Roman Church how beit they did complain of the envy of the Roman clergy and the pride of the Pope This may be called his privat judgement as he spake of others in his preface and not the constant faith of the whole Church that the Church should be manifest always was not the judgement of Eliah 1. King 19. 14. nor of John who prophecied of the woman fleeing into the wilderness Revel 12 and it is without all doubt in the general that in the dayes of the Antichrist the Church shall not be manifest 2. he grantes that the Roman Church hath departed not a litle in manners and doctrine but how far she hath departed may be in some measure known by the history 3. his advice that we should not have departed from her is a main question but certainly his reason is not sufficient for though our Saviour made not separation from the Jewish Church yet he foretold that when these labourers of the vine-yard shall have killed the heir the vineyard shal be taken from them and not a stone of their temple should be left upon another Where was their Church then if they had no place for their Religion As for the Pophets and Apostles distinguish the times before the time was come which God had appointed they had no reason to depart but when the appointed time was come then they departed and for this very point Steeven was Martyred Act. 6. 14. The same distinction serveth for the Roman Church Cyprian and Paulin had no reason to violat the vnion when she had not departed from the true faith but when she became the whoore and all nations had drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication then was the time to obey the commande Come out of her my people that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her plagues Gods people was with her and in her and they must not only protest against their adulterous mother but come out from her Then for reconciliation of the Church he seemes to despair that ever they will accept of his Overture to wit that those who have given the cause of distraction that is saith he the governors of the Church would remit some what of their too much rigor and yeeld a little for the peace of the Church and following the wishes and admonitions of many good people would reform the manifest abuses according to the rule of Divine Scripture and of the antient Church from which they have departed And next that those who eschuing those vices have fallen into the other extremity would confess their faults and return into the right way In other Articles that differ from the Popish Church he puts often a blame upon the Reformed if not for their Tenet yet for their practise For example of justification he saith What is said in the fourth article that men can not be justified before God by their own strength merits or works but are justified freely by faith it was evermore allowed by the Church and untill this day it is approved by all the writers of the Church So that I wonder why the Apology saith that they are condemned in this article as if it were taught that men obtain remission of sins for their own merits and not freely for Christ's sake Afterwards he cites the testimony of Bernard saying I consider three things whereupon all my hope stands the love of adoption the truth of the promise and the power of performing And saith he the Doctors of this age say not that they teach doubting whereby men should doubt of Gods mercy and mistrust but such fear of God whereby a diligence of living well and of keeping the received grace may be stirred up and increased in us as the Apostle saith Work forth your salvation with fear and trembling And they call this sear chast and filial which perfect love casts not forth but retaines and cherishes Which fear hath always adjoyned confidence and hope of Gods fatherly good-pleasure And seing those things are taught tooday in the Catholick Church the Protestants do not rightly in accusing the present Church that she bidds and teaches to doubt of Gods favor and of eternal life and put this blasphemous doctrin as they speak among the chief causes for which they should depart from her Of free will he saith on the 18. Artick The sum of this controversy which had been formerly and now is consists in this What the will of man can do to attain righteousness by which we are justified before God is not to be asscribed unto the power of free-will corrupted by sin but unto the singular grace of God which we have not by nature wherein we were
invest him in the kingdom and procuration given to the Lords Lindsay and Ruthuen to give up and resigne the rule of the realm in presence of the States together with another Commission ordaining the Earle of Murray Regent during Prince's minority if he will accept the Charge Or if he refuse to accept it upon his single person that he with the Duke the Earles of of Lennox Argyle Athol Morton Glencairn and Marre should Govern conjunctly These writes were published July 29. at the Market-cross of Edinburgh Then the Prince was crowned at Sterlin These two months the Earle of Mortay was not in the Country and being recalled returns in the beginning of August he visites the Queen and endeavors to joyn the Lords which had taken part with the Hamiltons or Neuters join them I say with these who had bound themselves for the Kings preservation but his travell was to litle purpose August 20. he accepteth the Regency and was proclamed Regent The other Lords seeing that all things grew strong on the Regents side sent unto the Counsell and by common advice it was decreed that a Parliament be called for setling the affaires of the realm at Edinburgh Decemb. 15. This Parliament was keept with such frequency as the like The Parliament A● 1567. was not remembred to have been seen Beginning was made after the approbation of the Queens renunciation and Commission of Regency at the affaires of the Church and sundry Acts were unanimously concluded one abolishing the Popes jurisdiction another repealing all statutes made in former times for mantenance of idolatry and superstition contrary to the confession of faith that was approved in the Parliament 1560. and now again ratified 3. The Masse is abolished and punishment appointed against all hearers and sayers of it 4. Those are not to be esteemed members of the Church who refuse the participation of the sacraments as they are now ministrat 5. The examination and admission of Minist s is only in power of the Church now openly professed and presentations should be directed unto the Supertendents or commissioners of the Church within sixe months or els the Church shall have power to dispone the same to a qualified person for that time 6. An oath to be given by the King at his coronation 7. None may be a Judge proctor notary nor member of a Court who professeth no● the true religion 8. The thirds of all Benefices shall now instantly and in all time coming be first payd to the Ministers ay and whill the Church come to the full possession of their proper patrimony which is the tyths providing that the Collectors make yearly account in the Checker so that Ministers being first answered the superplus be applied unto the Kings use 9. All teachers of the youth should be tryed by the Superintendents or Uisitors of the Church 10. Provestries prebendaries and chaplanries are appointed The XIV Assembly for entertaining Students in Colledges Jem Acts were made for punishing fornication incest and marriages within degrees forbidden by Gods word Item that the Queen should be detained in perpetuall prison within the castle of Lochleuin The Assemblie conveeneth Decemb. 25. John row Ministers at Santiohnstoun is chosen Moderator 1. Commissioners are appointed to concurre at all times with such persons of Parliament or Secret Counsell as have been named by the Regent to confer concerning the offenses that appertain to the jurisdiction of the Church as also for decision of questions that may occurre these were two Superintendents and seven other Ministers 2. Whereas the Earle of Argyle had given offense in putting away his wife and some other particulares he submits himselfe to the discipline of the Church and the Assembly ordaines the Superintendent of Argyle to try these slanders and cause satisfaction b● made as Gods word appoints and report his diligence to the next Assembly 3. Because Adam called Bishop of Orknay had married the Quee● with the Earle of Bothuell and so had transgressed an Act in marrying Both well a divorced adulterer the Assembly deprives hin from all fun●●ion in the Ministry 4. John craig is accused for proclaming the bans twixt the Queen and the Earle of Both●ell He gives his purgation in write after this manner To the end that they who fear God may understand my proceeding in this matter I shall shortly declare what I did and what moved mee to do it leaving the judgement of all unto the Church first at the request of Mr Thomas Hepburn in the Queen's name to proclame her with the Lord Bothuel I plainly refused because he had not her hand writ and because the constant bruit was that he had rauished her and keeped her in captivity On wednesday next the Justice-Clerk brought mee a writing subscribed with her hand bearing that she was neither ravished nor detained in captivity and therefore he charged mee to proclame My answer was I durst proclame no bans and chiefly such without consent of the Church On thurseday next the Church after long reasoning with the Justice Clerk concluded that the Q s mind should be published to her subjects three next preaching dayes but because the Gen. Assembly had prohibite all such marriages wee protested that they would neither solemnize nor approve that marriage but only would declaire the Queen's mind leaving all doubts dangers to the counsellers approvers and performers of the marriage Upon fridday next I declared the wholl progress and mind of the Church here he understands the Church-Session of Edinburgh desiring every man in Gods name to discharge his conscience before the Secret Counsell and to give boldness unto others I craved of the Lords there present time leave and place to speak my judgement before the parties Protesting if I were not heard I either would desist from proclaming or declare my mind publickly before the Church Therefore being admitted after noone before my L. in the Counsell I layd to his charge the law of adultery the ordinance of the Church the law of ravishing the suspicion of collusion betwixt him and his wife the suddain divorcement and proclaming within the space of four dayes and last the suspicion of the Kings death which his marriage would confirm But he answered nothing to my satisfaction Wherefore after many exhortations I protested that I could not but declare my mind publickly to the Church So on sunday after that I had declared what they had done and how they would proceed whither wee would or not I took heaven and earth to witnes that I abhorred and detested that marriage because it is odious and slanderous to the world and seeing the greatest part of the realm do approve it either by flattery or by silence I craved the faithfull to pray earnestly that God wold turn to the confort of this realm that which they intend against reason and good conscience Because I heard some persons grudging against mee I used these reasons for my defences first I had broken no law by proclaming
J. Christ correction of manners and administration of the holy Sacraments and declares that there is no other face of Church nor other face of religion than is presently by the favor of God established within this realm and that there be no jurisdiction ecclesiasticall acknowledged than which is and shall be within the famin Church or which flowes there from concerning the premisses 3. All markets and faires were forbidden to be keept on the Sabboth-day or in any Church or churchyaird so all handy-work on the Sabboth-day all gaming playing passing to taverns and aile-houses and wilfull remaining from their parish-church in time of Sermon or prayers and a pecuniall mulct layd upon the transgressours respective to be payd for the use of the poor of the parish 4. An Act was made concerning these who send their children out of country 5. Every housholder having lands or goods worth 500. pounds was obliged to have a Bible which at that time was printed in folio and a Psalme book in his house for the better instruction of themselves and their families in the knowledge of God 6. In the table of Acts not printed is mention of a Commssion anent the Jurisdiction of the Kirk the last part thereof Observe 1. The Parliament in the year 1560. is acknowledged to have been a lawfull Parliament 2. We may see that the disciplin at that time in the Church was authorised and ordained to continue Moreover what was the estate of the Church at that time wee may learn from an Epistle of Andrew meluin unto The. Beza dated Nouember 13. An. 1579. Wee have not ceased these fyue years to fight against pseudepiscopacy many of the Nobility resisting us and to presse the severity of discipline wee have presented unto his Roiall Majesty and three Estates of the realm both before and now in this Parliament the form of discipline to be insert among the Acts and to be confirmed by pulick authority wee have the Kings minde bended toward us but many of the Peers against us for they alledge if pseudepiscopacy be taken away one of the Estates is pulled down if presbyteries be erected the Rojall Majesty is diminished if Church-goods be restored unto the lawfull use the Kings treasury is emptied Seing the B. with Abbots and Priors make up the third Estate and all jurisdiction both ecclesiasticall and politicall belongeth unto the King and his Counsell and things ecclesticall should by their Sentence be adjudged unto the Kings treasure That they do speak or think so the cause in many is ignorance in others a wicked life and evill manners and in many a desire to catch the goods of the Church which yet remain or fear of losing what they have taken and what shall I say of that they hold that the Sentence of excommunication is not lawfull untill the cause be known by the Kings Counsell for they knowing their own guiltiness are feared for the Sentence of the Presbytery not so much for fear of Gods judgement as for terror of the civill punishments which by our lawes and practise do follow lastly whill they have regard unto the wisdom of the flesh more than unto the reveeled word of God they wish that all things should be carried in the name and at the beck of a Bishop or one perpetuall overseer and would have nothing administred by the common sentence of the Presbytery The Lord in mercy sweep away these evills from his Church This epistle is in Vindic. Philadelph Pag. 41. Immediatly before this Parliament the Duke d'Obigny afterwards styled Earle of Lennox came into Scotland towit in the last week of Septemb. as Spotswood shewes in Histor Pag. 308. Now if we conferre that time with what is written in that page his splene may appeare against the truth for he makes the Duke's coming to be a cause of variance betwixt the King and the Church at the Assembly preceeding where no difference was appearing but afterwards some what followes Jelousies and emulations were in the winter following among the Noble men as the Earle of Athol Chancelor was envied and died and others fled out of the Country but no variance did as yet appeare betwixt the King and the Church-men XVII In Aprile 1580. a Proclamation was made in the Kings name 1580. ex deliberatione Dominorum Consilii charging all Superintendents and Comnissioners and Ministers serving at Kirks to note the names of all the subjects alsweel men as women suspected to be Papists or ...... And to admonish them ...... To give confession of their faith according to the Form approved by the Parliament and to submit unto the disciplin of the true Church within a reasonable space ...... And if they faile ...... That the Superintendent or Commissioners present a catalogue of their names unto the King and Lords of the Secret Counsell where they shall bee for the time between and the 15. day of July next to come to the end that the Acts of Parliament made against such persons may be executed The Assembly conveens at Dundy July 12. here was the Laird of Lundy Commissioner The 38. Assembly from the King Commissioners c. James Lowson is chosen Moderator 1. Some spake against the Privy Conference as if tyranny and usurpation might creep-in by it and liberty were taken from other members nevertheless after reasoning it was judged expedient to continue 2. John Craig one of the Kings Ministers delivereth this Letter from the King Trusty and welbeloved friends Wee greet you well Wee have directed toward you our trusty friend the Prior of Pettinweem and the Laird of Lundy instructed with Our power for assisting with their power and counsell in all things that they may tending to the glory of God and preservation of Vs and Our Estates desiring you heartily to accept them and Our good will committed to them for the present in good part so wee commend you to Gods blest protection From our palace of Falkland July 11. 1580. 3. Forsomuch as the Office of a Bishop as it is now used and commonly taken in this realm hath no sure warrant authority nor good ground out of the Scriptures of God but is brought in by folly and corruption of mens inventions to the great overthrow of the Church of God The wholl assembly in one voice after liberty given to ail men to reason in the matter and none opponing himselfe to defend the said pretended Office Finds and declares the same pretended Office used and termed as is above said Unlawfull in itselfe as having neither ground nor warrand within the Word of God And ordaines all such persons as use or shall use hereafter the said Office shal be charged to dimit simpliciter quite and leave-off the same as an Office whereunto they are not called by God And to desist and cease from all preaching ministration of the sacraments or using any way the office of Pastors untill they receive de novo admission from the Generall assembly Under the pain of
the Duke is offended are these that Walter had spoken in pulpit That within these four years Papistry had entred into the Country not only into the Court but into the Kings hall and maintained by tyranny of a great Champion which is called Grace And if his Grace will oppone himselfe unto Gods Word he shall have litle grace And concerning the Bishop of Glasgow the King desireth that they stay from proceeding against him as Bishop but if the Church hath any other things to lay unto his charge let them use their order Hereunto Wa. Balcanquell answered First he praiseth God that he is not accused of any thing wherein he hath eitheir Ciyily or criminally in his life conversation offended the King or his lawes whereunto with all reverence and at all times he is ready to submitt himselfe But he is accused of these things which he hath spoken publickly in the pulpit as being more plain in reproving vice than some men can well suffer which is a main point of his doctrine and howbeit he hear it now opposed he must so justify the same that although all the Kings on earth would call it erroneous he is ready to prove it by good reason to be the very truth of God and if need shall require to seall it with his blood Secondly he praiseth God for that by his last accusation God hath given so much victory unto his church that howbeit then in was called into question Unto whom the judgement of doctrin should appertaine Yet as then by reason it was concluded by the Kings Majesty his Counsell and Commissioners appointed by them to conferr with the Ministers in that matter that in all time coming the tryall of a Ministers doctrin should be referred to the judgement of the assembly of the Church as the only competent Judge thereof So it is now performed and because he seeth the promise now keept he thankes God and is the more glad to give his answer before the assembly and that in this manner These things he spoke in his Sermon on wednesday last he spoke them not quietly but all the assembly heard them and so of all men can best judge of them wherefore with all reverence he submits himself simpliciter unto their godly judgement Nevertheless neither being asshamed of his doctrin nor minded to give any advantage to his enemies so for as he may whose purpose he knowes against him in this matter he only requires this condition that the Canon of the Apostle Paul be keept to wit Against an elder receive no accusation but under two or three witnesses This form of proceeding he craves in this matter As yee are the assembly of the Church and competent Judges unto him so he is ready to answer before you to all accusations that shall be layd against him and underly your judgement Let any man therefore according to the Canon of the Apostle which in no way yee may break stand up before you and say he hath any thing to accuse mee and hath two or three witnesses ready with him to prove his accusation then shall I answer him And seing James melvin heard not the doctrin and therefore will not take upon him to accuse I will said he supercede further answer untill I see my accuser The assembly sent Tho. Smeton and Da. Ferguson with this answer unto the King that seing Wa. Balcanquell is a brother of the Ministry the Canon of the Apostle should be keept and the accuser with two witnesses should be present As also to desire his Ma. to send Commissioners to see this matter tryed as the Church is most willing to try the same In the sixth Session following the same Wa. Bulcanquall submits himself unto the judgement of the assembly and craves that they would proceed therein according to the canon of the Apostle The Assembly ordereth Da. Lindsay and Tho. Smeton to go unto the King as before is said The next day they report that they could have no answer because of great affaires of the King and Counsell In the Session following Da Lindsay is directed to go unto the Church-Session of Edinburgh and desire them to declare whither they or any of them found any error scandall or offense in the Sermon preached by Wa. Balcanquell upon the wednesday before named In Session 18. the assembly willing to try the points of accusation given by James melvin in name of the Duke of Lennox and having sundry times traveled with his Ma. that the rule of the Apostle should be keept And that his Ma. would direct Commissioners to understand their just proceeding and no effect of their suit hath followed And for satiffaction to his Ma. and for removing all scandall that may arise hereby they had directed a Commissioner unto the particulare Church of Edinburgh requiring them if they had found or know any word spoken in that Sermon erroneous or offensive and their answer is reported by a member of the Session that they heard nothing spoken by him that day that was scandalous or offensive but good and sound doctrin After voting in this matter without any contradiction the assembly declares that they nor any of them did find any fault in the said Sermon either of error scandall or just offence but solide and true doctrine praising God and justifying their brother of that accusation 9. In Sess 9. certain brethren were named to travell diligently in erection of Presbyteries before the next assembly as they are directed into severall Provinces and James lowson is ordained to penn a form of proceeding that the brethren knowing the order may keep an uniformity 10. Articles whereof Robert mon gomery minister at Sterlin was openly accused in Sess 10. are 1. that preaching in the church of Sterlin he moved a question Whither women were circumcised and concluded that they were circumcised in the foreskin of their head 2. He teaching in Glasgow said The disciplin of the Church is a thing indifferent and may stand this or that way 3. He accused the Ministers that they used fallacious arguments and that they were curious braines 4. He sought to bring the Originall languages into contempt to wit Hebrew Greek to that end abusing the words of the Apostle 1. Cor. 14. and tauntingly asking In what school were Peter and Paul graduat 5. To. prove the corrupt estate of Bishops in our time he alledged the exempls of Ambrose and Augustin c. 6. It is sufficient to baptize in the name of the Father only or in the name of the Son Or in the name of the Holy Ghost because they are all one God 7. The matters of disciplin and lawfull calling in the Church he called triffls of policy 8. He accused the Ministers of sedition and Laese-Majesty in exhorting them not to be seditious nor meddle with high matters nor put-off crowns or put-on crowns and if they medle any farther there-in they will be reproved 9. He contemned the application of the Scripture to particular
A Declinature from the Counsell conveennig on the 17 day perceive that the Kings and the Counsell's aim was by this preparative to draw Ministers doctrine under their censure controlment And remembring that some decllnatures of this nature given-in by some brethren before were forgoten or denied because they were only verball do resolve upon a declinature in write and fortify it by good reasons and to be subscribed by them with David seing the cause is common David compeares upon the 18. day and gives-in the declinature On the 20. day it was thought needfull to send a copy of the declinature unto every Presbytery and be subscribed by all the members together with a missive requesting them to return it being subscribed with all possible diligence with some brother who was able to assist them in so weighty matters and also desiring every one study diligently this question and all the points of the discipline for certanly Satan was making an assault on the hedge of the Lords vineyard that at his pleasure he may destroy and wast the plants thereof Diligence was used in gathering subscriptions so that in short space the hands of about 400. were at it None so diligent as John Spotswood afterwards Bishop of Santandr howbeit even then he reveeled unto the King all their counsels proceedings either by himself or somtimes by a Courtier with whom he was familiar he was the only suspected Judas among the Ministers at that time others were like Hazael who understood not their own hollow hearts till time discovered them On November 24. the Commissioners of the Church being for the most part present and being enformed that they were to be charged to go off the town did resolve that seing they were conveened by warrant by Christ and his Church in so dangerous a time to see that the Church receive no detriment they wold continue notwithstanding any charge so long as it shall be found expedient and in the mean time they sent Ministers Da. Lindsay Ro. Rollock and Ja. Melvin unto the K. to shew him what inconvenients may ensue if he enter into hard dealing with the church and discharge the Commissioners of the Gen. assembly to beseech him to desist from pursute of D. Black and all controversies arising thereby till order were taken with the common enemy and a Gen. assembly be convocated fordeciding all controversies and answering all his questions And to move him to consider the danger wherein the Countrey lieth by Papists binding themselfs together associating to themselves sundry Clanns preparing arms and horses c. The next day they report his answer He was sory that matters have so fallen out betwixt him and the Commissioners yet if they will passe from the deelinature at least make a declaration that it was not Generall but used particularly in that cause of David Black being a case of slander and pertaining by right unto the church he will passe from the summons and all pursute of David Black By the way here we may understand that the words wherefore he was charged were not so odious as some have reported them Then diverse formes of a declaration were advised but they could not find one which in their judgement would please the king In end they condes●ended to make this offer that if his Majesty would passe from that summons and cease from all charging of Ministers for their preaching till a lawfull Generall assembly were convocated they will on the other side take up the declinature and cease to make any use of it untill the said assembly The brether that were directed report on the 27. day how they had spent much time in reasoning with his Majesty but could not agree unless the Commissioners would passe from the declinature and cause David Black answer and acknowledge the Judicatory But they would not undertake it Upon the same 27. day David Black was summoned again by proclamation and sound of trumpet at the cross for speaches uttered by him in his Sermons these three years last by past And because somtimes Barons and others sare with the Ministers all the Leedges were discharged by proclamation to assemble at the desire of Ministers Presbyteries or other ecclesiasticall judgements Under pretense of assisting them in their defense being accused of any cause crime or offense or when they repaire to any judgement seat or otherwise Without his Majesties licence Letters also were given forth upon Act of Counsell charging the Commissioners of the Generall assembly to depart out of rhe town within 24. houts after the charge and discharging them to conveen any where els Immediatly the Commissioners conveen and lay the proclamation open before the Lord the Judge of so odious imputations as they were burdened-with in these proclamations and usurpation of Supreme authority over the Church they advised them who were to occupy the pulpits to deale mightily by the word against these proclamations and charges and to use such arguments as may flow from good grounds which were then layd befored them November 29. they resolve to give-in some articles unto the King and Counsell the day following which was the day of Mr Blacks compearance wherein they do clear themselves of these odious imputations and they crave to slay that action till a Gen. assembly be convocated they thought it also expedient in respect of the new libelled summons that another declinature be formed and used by David in his own name and of the rest of the Ministry On the 29. day the hour approaching the Commissioners appoint Robert Bruce Robert Pont Robert Rolock David Lindsay Pa. Galloway to present their articles and to assist David in his action the rest were exercised in the mean time in praying and confessing their sins which had procured such trouble The brethren returning about half an hour after twelve reported that some had entred into commoning with them and condescended upon some grounds of agreement that the commoners on the Ks part were to travell with his Majesty against afternoon and themselves were to deal with the Commissioners One ground whereupon they had condescended was that they would take up their declinature and the Counsell their summons and use a form of protestation After noon when there was no appearance of agriement and the Counsell were sitting the second declinature was given in wherein David adhereth unto the first and fortifieth it with moe reasons and the above-named articles were presented David was wonderfully assisteth with courage and wisdom and the brether also who were appointed to assist him especially Rob. Bruce Nevertheless the King and Counsell do passe to the Interloquiture and declare themselves Judges competent to all the points of the libell except one which concerned the Religion of England So scrupulous were they to medle with matters spirituall or ecclesiasticall The brether returning unto the rest who were exercized as before noone report what was past It was thought meet that the doctrine be directed against the Interloquiture as
a strong Fort set up against the freedom of the Gospell and to give thanks unto God for unity of Spirit among themselves Immediatly after the dissolving the Threasurer Provest of Edinburgh crave conference with Robert Bruce Robert Rollock James Nicolson James Melvin They say the King notwithstanding the Interloquiture intendeth not extremity against that Minister but for maintaining peace with the Church he would pardon him if they would bring him unto his Majesty and cause him declare the truth in all the points libelled After deliberation they answer If it were but one mans particular that were in question or danger his Majesties offer were thankfully to be accepted But it is the liberty of the Gospell which was grievously wounded in the discipline thereof by the proclamation on Saturday last and now in the preaching of the word by usurping the judicatory thereof If the King had taken that mans life or of moe he could not have wounded the hearts of the brethren more deeply nor done such injury unto Christ they can no way be content unless these things be retreated and amended but must oppose such proceedings with extream hazerd of their lifes The Messingers taking up the weight of the matter were much moved and returned unto the King with their answer The next day a gentle man of the kings Chamber came timously to one of the brethren and craved the bent of the doctrine might be stayd that day not doubting but his Maj. will satisfy them It was answered The edge of the doctrin can not be blunted without evident appearance of amendement of wrongs yet he and another went unto the king and these returning reported the kings mind and offers to declare his meaning concerning the proclamations and the Interloquiture The brethren reioice not a litle they set down his offers in writ amending some points they write the grounds articles of agreement that the k. might see whither they were according to his meaning The brether which were directed unto him found him well content w●th the articles he said he wold abolish the two Acts which were proclamed and not suffer them to be booked and of his own accord he offered to write unto the Presbyteries and satisfy them concerning the Interloquiture if they shall give him a band of dutifulness in their doctrin on the other part As for Da. Black let him come and declare his conscience concerning the libell before David Lindsay James Nicolson Thomas Buchanan and thereafter he shal be content to do what they shall judge meet In the afternoon they returning found the King changed he directeth David Lindsay to crave of David Black that he compear before the Counsell and there confesse an offense done to the Queen at least and so receive pardon David Black refuseth to confesse for in so doing he shall acknowledge the Counsell to be Judges of his Sermons and approve their proceedings to be lawfull when they had summoned him and admitted ignorant and partially affected persons lying under the censures of the Church at his procurement to be witnesses albeit he hath ample testimonialls of Provest Bailives Counsell Church-●ession of the Rector the Dean of faculty Principalls of the Colledges Regents and other members of the University his dayly auditors all which were produced for him but if it would please his Maj. to remit him unto his ordinary Iudge the Ecclesiasticall Senate he will depone the truth willingly in every point and underly their censure and ordinance if found guilty The King went to Counsell David Black not compearing the deposition of the witnesses is read the points of the libell are declared to be proved and the punishment is referred unto the King The Acts of proclamation and whole process is registred The doctrine in Sermon soundeth fr●ely in the old manner The king craves conference again with the same Ministers After much reasoning they return unto Articles and grounds of agreement then was produced a form of declaration concerning the proclamation another of the charge and a Missive unto the Presb of Edinb concerning the Interloquiture When these btethren had caused diverse things to be amended they received them to be cōmuicated unto the commissioners and others waiting upon their returning The formes and declarations being considered were not found sufficient to repair the injuries done but rather ratified the same Other formes and declarations were devised and a Missive unto the Presbytery as also an Act of their dutifull obedience Sundry conferences past betwixt the king and Counsell and the three Ministers above named but without success for on wednesday December ● these three Ministers reported unto a frequent meeting of their brethren come from sundry Provinces and joyning with the Commissioners that the king in presence of the Counsell refused to accept that form of Letter written by them to be sent unto the Presbyteries be●ause it imported albeit indirectly an annulling of the Interloquiture 2. He refused the Act of dutifull obedience as not sufficient because it contained not a simple Band of not speaking against the King and his Counsell but limited with certain conditions which would ever come again into question and turn to the controversie of the Judicatory Note this 3. The formes of declaration that was penned by the brethren was refused because they imported a plain retracting of the proclamations and an acknowledgement of an offense 4. The King will no way pass from the interloquiture nor suspend the execution of it untill a Generall assembly but seing the punishment is in his will he will declare it unto the brether in private which was transportation or suspension for a space They answered They could not agree for the reasons above named In end the K craves to be resolved of certain speaches uttered by him to wit The treachery of his he art was disclosed all Kings are the Devils children and he required that David shall chuse seven or eicht of 20. or 25. of his auditors whose names shall be given him that by their deposition the cause may be resolved and in the mean time he shall desist from preaching They answered They had no commission for that but to crave the acceptation of the formes propounded and they will report the answers December 9. their report was heard the brethren perceive that nothing is done and in the mean time the enemies do attain their will therefore they think it not expedient to use any more commoning but by some brethren to let his Majesty know how they had humbly sought redresse of wrongs done to Christ in his kingdom lately by that charge proclamations interloquiture and process against one of their most faithfull brethren how they have been most willing to have condescended to any conditions of peace till the wounds which Christs Kingdom had received might be throughly cured to the intent his forces and the Churche's authority might be set against the common enemies but seeing they are disappointed they are free of what shall ensue and
true pastors can not without treason against their spirituall king abstain from fighting against such proceedings with such sprirituall armor as are given them potent throgh God for overthrowing these bulwarks mounts erected for sacking the Lords Jerusalem Decemb. 10. Da. Black was charged to go north within sixe dayes and remain by north the North-water till his Majesty declared his will Under the pain of rebellion and putting him to the horn Decemb. 11. the Commissioners were informed that a great number of missives were written and ready to be directed through the Countrey for calling a convention of Estates and a Generall assembly the tenor followes Wee greet you well As wee have ever carryed a speciall good will to the effectuating of the policy of the Church of which wee have often conference with the Pastors and Ministry so wee and they both resolving now in end that the whole order of the said policy shall be particularly condescended agreed upon for avoiding sundry questions controversies that may fall out to the slander danger of religion Wee have for that effect appointed alswell a generall Convention of our Estates as a Generall Assembly of the Ministry to hold here in Edinb the first day of February next To treat and resolve all questions standing in controversy or difference between the Civill and Ecclesiasticall judgement or any way concerning the policy and externall governing of the Church and therefore will wee effectually desireand request you that you fail not all excuses set apart to be present at our Convention the day place foresaid precisely to give your best advice opinion in that matter as you tender the effectuating there of the well of religion and Estate and will shew yourselves our dutifull and affected subjects So wee committ you to Gods protection From Halirud house the day of Decemb. 1596. Here the reader may more clearly perceive that the alteration of the established government was intended before the 17. day of December and that not only the marches of the Jurifdiction Civille and ecclesiastcall were sought to be ridd but the order of the church-government was to be called into question howbeit thereafter nothing was pretended at first but the restraint of application of doctrine and Ministers vote in Parliament to vindicat them from poverty and contempt because otherwise strong opposition was feared On decemb 14. the Commissioners of the Generall assembly exhorted the Ministers of the presbytery of Edinburgh as they will answer unto God and the Church in so necessary a time To call before them such persons of highest ranks as are known or may be found to be malicious enemies and to proceed against them to excommunication The same day the charge that was given out against the Commissioners of the Church was proclamed with sound of trumpet After advisement they thought it lawfull to disobey so unlawfull charges but nedless and not expedient seing after them others might succed and so the work might proceed So they resolve to depart committing the cause unto God and the diligent care of the presbytery of Edinburgh but fearing the fearfull tentation of poverty micht prevaile with the weaker sort and move them to subscribe a Band which might captiously import the King and Counsells power to judge of Ministers doctrin be cause the King had said the day pr●ceeding They who will not subscribe shall want their stipends they thought it requisite to send unto every presbytery a declaration of their proceedings The minute of their proceedings I have now set down In their declaration they write plainly that when they were insisting with his Majesty to appear in action against the forfeited Earls he had converted all his actions against the Ministry with hoter intention than he could be moved against the adversaries this long time that so they may be driven from prosecuting their suits against the Papists and to employ themselves wholly in defense of preaching disciplin that the restraint of rebuking censuring sin was the principall Butt aimed at in all this action because the mystery of iniquity which hath been intended begun and is going forward whither the purpose be to thrall the gospell by Injunctions or by a policy equivalent to injunctions or to bring-in liberty of conscience or if to draw more papistry which is to be feared for many reasons and will be reveeled in time being such as can not abide the light of reprehension the only advantage of their cause is thought to consist in extinguishing the light which can discover the unlawfulness of it that so they may walk-on in darknes without all challenge untill the truth be overthrown And because impiety dar not as yet be so impudent to crave in express termes that swine be not rebuked it is sought only that his Majesty and Counsell be acknowledged judges in matters Civile and criminall treasonable and seditious which shall be uttered by any Minister in his doctrin thinking to draw the rebuke of sin in King Counsell or their proceedings under the name of one of these crimes and so either to restrain the liberty of preaching or to punish it under the name of some vice by a pretense of law and justice and so by time to bind the word of God and let sin pass with lifted up hand to the highest c. Yee see now wha● was the controversy betwixt the King and the Ministry The sum of all The King would have the Ministers to heare the offers made by the forfeited Earls that they might be reconciled unto the Church On the other side Ministers urge that they be removed out of the Country again and that he do the office of a Magistrate as becomes him for their treasonous conspiracy the pardon whereof he had professed in the beginning to be above his reach and their offers import conference but no confession of an offense nor were made in sincerity as the event did prove This could not be obtained therefore pulpits sounded against the favorers of these as became faithfull watchmen to discharge duty in so dangerous a time Publick rebuke of publick and crying sins was called into question and so was the established disciplin and they were driven from the offensive to the defensive part The Ministry craved but the tryall of Ministers in the first instance to be appertaining unto the Ecclesiasticall Judicatory for application of doctrine to the rebuke of corruptions and publick offenses as they should be by the word of God practises in former times but it was refused What sins did reigne in the land the catalogue drawn up by the late assem witnesseth ..... Had they not reason then to blow the trumpet and forewarn the people of Gods judgements and now when the chief enemies forfeited for unnaturall conspiracy were suffered to return and abide in the Country The wild border-men stood in greater awe of excommunication by a presbytery than of Letters of horning I know a Noble man confessed that
the King was commoved for the dis-honor he apprehended done unto him that day therefore they left off their commission and vvent to their lodgings The next day the King vvent to Lithgovv all that vvere not ordinary inhabitants in Edinburgh vvere commanded to leave it the Lords of the Session vvere vvarned to be ready to remove and to sit vvhere they shall be advertised by the next proclamation the Magistrates vvere commanded to search and apprehend the authors of that hainous attempt Some of the burgesses vvere committed to sundry vvards the Ministers of Edinb were commanded to enter into the castle of the town because the Kings wrath was hotest against them and to the end the chief Octavianes might use them at their pleasure After advice with some others it was thought expedient they should withdraw themselves till the present flamm were over For all the diligent inquisition which was made many daies no ground could be found of any conspiracy against the King or any other only when the tumult was raised one or two cried to have some of the Octavianes abusers of the King to take order with them for which words they were fined If there had been any intention to do harm unto any man what could have himdred then from doing it there was no party in readiness able to withstand them Yee see then the tumult of Decemb. 17. was no just cause to move the K. to charge the Government of the Church nor to wrong the wholl Nationall Church for the tumult of one town howbeit their fact had been grounded on bad intentions nor may Ks thrust Christs government to the door for the faults of men and bring-in what forms they please But as no just occasion was givē so that tumult can not serve so much as for a pretence seing as it is now discovered the alteration was intended before December 17. On the 20. day Pa. Galloway was sent unto the K. at Lithgow but was not suffered to come neer the King only a copy of a Band was sent unto him whereof mention was made before to be subscribed by the Ministers Under pain of losse of their stipends but he and others after him refused for many reasons The questions whereof mention was made before 55. in number came forth in print soon after and the Convention of the Estates and of the Ministry was appointed to be held at Perth February 29. for consulting upon and determining the jurisdiction spirituall of the Church alswell in application of doctrin as the whole policy in all these questions the main point of policy to wit the superiority of Bishops was conceiled howbeit chiefly aimed at In time of these sturs in Scotland began throughout England the more solemne and pious observation of the Lords The keeping of the Lords day began in England day upon occasion of a book set forth An. 1595. by P. bound Doctor of Divinity and enlarged with additions An. 1606. wherein these following opinions were maintained 1. The command of sanctifying every seventh day as in the Mosaicall decalogue is moral and perpetual 2. Whereas all other things in the Jewish Church were taken away priesthood sacrifices and Sacrament this sabbath was so changed that it still remaines 3. There is a great reason why we Christians should take ourselves as streightly bound to rest upon the Lords day as the Jewes were upon their sabbath it being one of the moral commandements whereof all are of equal authority 4. the rest upon this day must be a notable and singular rest a most carefull exact and precise rest after another manner then men are accustomed 5. Schollers on that day are not to study the liberal Arts nor Lawyers to consult the case nor peruse mens evidentes 6. Sergeants Apparitors and Sumners are to be restrained from executing their offices 7. Justices not to examin causes for the conservation of the peace 8. Ringing of more bells then one that day is not to be justified 9. No solemn feasts nor wedding dinners to be made on that day 10. all honest recreations and pleasures lawfull on other dayes as shooting fencing bowling on this day is to be forborn 11. No man to speak or talk of pleasures or any other worldly matter It is almost incredible how taking this doctrine was partly because of its own purity and partly for the eminent piety of such persons as maintained it so that the Lords day especially in Corporations began to be precisely keept people becoming a law to themselves forbearing such sport as by Statute were yet permitted yea many reioicing at their own restraint herein On this day the stoutest fencer layd down his buckler the skilfull Archer unbent his bow counting all shooting to be besides the Mark May-games and Morish-dances grew out of request and good reason that bells should be silenced from gingling about mens leggs if their ringing in Steepls were judged unlawfull some were ashamed of their former pleasures like children vvho grovvn bigger blush themselves out of their rattles and vvhistles Others forbear them for fear of their Superiors and many left them off out of a Politick compliance lest othervvise they might be accounted licencious Yet the learned vvere much divided in their judgement about these doctrines some embraced them as antient truths consonant to Scripture long disused and neglected and now seasonably revived for the encrease of piety Others conceived them grounded on a wrong bottom but because they tended to the manifest advancing of religion it was pitty to oppose them seing none have just reason to complain being deceived into their own good But a third sort flatly fell out with these positions as galling mens necks with a Jewish yoak against the liberty of Christians that Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had removed the rigor thereof and allowed men lawfull recreations that this Doctrine put an unequal Lustre on the Sunday on set purpose to eclipse all other holy dayes to the derogation of the authority of the Church that this strict observance was set up of faction to be a character of difference to brand all for Libertines who did not entertain it How ever for some years together in this controversy Dr bound alone carried the Garland none offering openly to oppose yea as he in his second edition observes many both in their preachings writtings and disputations did concurr with him in that argument and though Archb. Whitgift in the year 1599. by his Letters had forbidden those books any more to be printed and Sir John Popham Lord chief Justice in their year 1600. did call them in yet all their care did but for the present make the Sunday set in a cloud to arise soon after in more brightness for the Archb. his known opposition to the proceedings of the Anti-episcopal Brethren rendred his actions more odious as if out of envy he had caused such a pearle to be concealed and some conceived though it was most proper for Judge Popham's place to punish
hurtfull to religion or contrary unto the word they shall privatly complain thereupon unto the King or his Counsell 3. It shall not be lawfull to the Pastors to name any particulare mans name in the pulpit or so vively to describe them as may be equivalent with their naming excep upon the notoriety of a crime this not oriety may only be defined by the guilty person being fugitive for the time or being condemned by an assyse or excommunicate for the same 4. Every Minister in his application shall have only respect to the edification of his own flock and present auditors without exspatiating upon other discourses no way pertinent to that congregation 5. Every particular presbytery shall be commanded to take diligent heed unto their Pastors doctrin and that he keep himself within the bounds of the premisses 6. That summary excommunication be discharged as inept and that three lawfull citations at least of eight dayes intervall betwixt every one of them preceed the Sentence 7. That no Session Presbytery nor Synod use their censures upon any but them that are resident within the bounds committed unto them otherwise their decreets and Sentences to be null 8. All summons shall contain a speciall ca●se and crime and none super inquirendis to be summoned quod est merè tyrannicum 9. That no meeting or conventions be among Pastors without his Maj. knowledge consent excep their ordinary Sessions Presbyteries Synods 10. That in all the principall townes Ministers be not chosen without the consent of their own flock and of his Majesty and that order to be begun presently in the planting of Edinburgh 11 That all matters concerning the rest of his Maj. questions be suspended unmedled-with either in pulpit or any other Judicatory whill first all his Hieness questions be fully decided specially that all matters emporting slander come not in before them in the mean time wherein his autority Roiall is prejudged highly but only in causes meerly ecclesiasticall 12. That seven or eight wise discreet Ministers be authorized by commission to reason upon the rest of the questions as opportunity of time shall serve 13. That they give commission to the Ministry of the North to be at a point with Huntly and if he satisfy them to absolve him For the better answering these articles the Assembly ordaines certain brethren chosen ●ut of every Shyre presently conveened to give their advice Overture upon them and thereafter to report them unto the Assembly These wer 21 in number of whom nyne wer Bishops thereafter In Sess 5. the brether being desired by the Kings Commissioner sent for that effect to repair unto the place where his Majesty and Estates were presently sitting to conferr on the foresaid Articles at his Maj. desire they went to the Counsell-house and there before any reasoning after his Majesty had discoursed of the things to be propounded protested in manner following Sir forsomuch as wee are come hither to testify our obedience unto your Majesty and to heare what shall be propounded by your Majesty unto us In all reverence we protest that this our meeting be not esteemed as if wee made our selves an assembly with the Estates or do submitt any matter ecclesiasticall either concerning doctrin or disciplin unto this Judicatory but after that wee have conferred and reasoned with your Majesty concerning the articles propounded unto us we must return to the ordinary place of our assembly there to reason vote and resolve in all these points according to the word of God and good conscience And this our protestation we most humbly crave may be admitted in your Maj. books of Counsell for eschuing inconveniente that hereafter may arise This protestation was ratified iterated and confirmed by his Ma. So after some reasoning upon the articles the brethren were dimitted In Sess 6. the same day they gave their answers agreeing simpliciter unto the first second fourth eight tenth elleventh unto the third with this addition that the notoriety be defined if the person be fugitive convict by an Assise excommunicat contumax after citation or lawfull admonition Unto the fifth with this change That he keep himselfe within the bounds of the word Unto the nynth with exception of visitations of churches admission deprivation of Ministers reconciling of enmities and such like Unto the twelth also and to that effect they appoint Ministers Ja. Nicolson Jo. Cauld●leuch An. Clayhills D. Lindsay Tho. Buchanan Ja. Melvin R. Wilky W. Couper Io. Couper Ia. Brison Ro. Rolock Pa. Galioway Io. Duncanson Ro. Howy To treat of the questions and report their advice unto the next Gen. assembly Referring the time and place of conveening unto his Ma. The sixth and seventh articles are refetred to the next gen assembly Concerning the 13. they give commission unto the Ministers of Murray and Aberdien Presbyteries to insist in conference with Huntly and they adioyn five Ministers out of Merns and Anguse and ordain them to report his answers to the articles given them in commission for his tryall II. In Sess 7. the articles for tryall of the Earle of Huntly are 1. That from the day of his compearance before the said commissioners he shall make his constant residence in Aberdien that he be not abstracted from hearing the word and ordinary conference enduring the time appointed for the same 2. That he be well enformed with knowledge to condescend in the principall grounds of religion affirmativè and the untruth of the errors contrary unto the same and that he be able to give a reason of his knowledge in some measure 3. That he be brought to a plain acknowledging of the Church within this Country and professe himselfe adioined to the same as an obedient member thereof and be content to hear the word to participate the sacraments and obey the disciplin of the Church as presently avowed by the K. and Estates 4. That he solemily promise by word and written band to remove out of his company wholl bounds under his power all Iesuits priests and excommunicat persons 5. That he swear and s●bscribe the Confession of faith in presence of all the Commission●rs 6. That he agree to satisfy in the church of Aberdien in most humble manner for his apostasy and there renew the foresaid promises and bandes in most solem manner 7. That he declare his grief and repentance for the slaughter of the Earle of Murray and promise to make assithment or satisfaction unto the party when it shall be accepted and declare his foresaid repentance and grief at th● time of his foresaid publick satisfaction 8. Because by occasion of service done to his Ma. in pursuing the said Earle by force and otherwise sundries in these parts have incurred his displeasure that he be content to remove all these occasions with such convenient diligence as these commissioners shall think expedient 9. for declaratiō of his sinceer adjoyning with us that he be content at their sight and advice of his best
the next Assembly their resolution with their reasons And in the mean while no nomination to be used in application 4. Let all commissions be used according to the Acts of the assembly 5. Doctors have had and may have vote in the assembly if they have lawfull commission for that effect as it was declared in the assembly at Edinburgh year 1586. and in other assemblies 6. Let the cautions be precisely keept and looked-unto as they were ordained The seventh is answered by the assembly 8. Nothing is to be done in the assemblies unless it be reasoned and advised sufficiently 9. We acquiesce in his Majesties declaration as W. Balcanquall will declair 10. Let their names be given up and order should be taken precisely The 11. Is ended in the assembly 12. We acquiesce in his Ma s declaration who will acquaint the presbyteries as occasion shall require 13 14. Let greater diligence be used and things amended on all hands in time coming according to the Acts of the ass These answers were approved registred IX Commission is given unto 24. Ministers or any nyne of them to attend on the King with power as in the last assembly And other 24. brethren are named adjoyned unto the Commissioners of Provinces that were conveened at Holyrudhouse October 15. year 1600. out of which number his Majesty may make choice of whom he will present unto ●aking Benefices who should vote in Parliament X. The assembly ordaines all persons to keep the sabbath and inhibites all kind of fishing and grinding of mills on the sabbath day Under pain of the censure of the Church And ordains the Commissioners to petition his Majesty that a pecuniall mulct may be laid upon the contraveeners of this Act. XI An Act is made for planting the Churches of Annandeal which have been destitute since the Reformation and that all not provided Ministers shall accept a charge there sufficient stipends being provided or to be declared uncapable of the Ministry To this effect a roll of Expectants or Students is written XII The Moderator in name of the Assembly makes humble request unto his Majesty in favour of Robert Bruce that seing he is admitted to return he may be restored unto his former Ministry The King declares that he will do by advice of their commissioners as Robert shall give occasion by his behaviour And because by his Missive unto his Majesty before his way going as also by his ratification and declaration thereof in writ at Perth Iuny 15. last by past he had declared his resolution concerning his Majesties innocency and the guiltiness of Goury and his brother and had promised to divert the people so far as lay in him from their lewd opinions uncharitable misconstructions of his Majesties actions in that matter Therefore his Majesty craves the determination of the Assembly whether the same Robert should make the same declaration in the pulpit as it is at length written in the Missive and explanation thereof Which both were read and ordained to be registred The Assembly voiced that the said Robert should do as he had promised XIII The Assembly ordaines that all Ministers should keep the fifth day of August by conveening their people and teaching that day by giving thanks unto God for preserving the King from that conspiracy of Goury and his brother And the King promiseth that he shall discharge all riotousness drunkenness and other wickedness by open proclamation and shall ordain Magistrats to take heed thereunto XIV No marriage should be celebrated in the morning nor with candle light and judgeth it lawfull to celebrat marriage on the Sabbath or any other preaching day indifferently so that no riotousness be used XV. The Sacrament of Baptism should not be refused unto infants if the parent crave it he giving a Christian Confession of his faith and specially that Baptism be not astricted unto particular dayes XVI A summons was read that was raised at the instance of the Synod of Lothian against Dame Elenor Hay Countess of Lithgow charging her to appear before this Assembly to prosecute her appellation from the Sentence of excommunication pronounced against her by the Presbytery of Lithgow With certification if she appeared not the Assembly would ratify that Sentence Alexander Earle of Lithgow gives a large supplication mentioning how grieved he was for the obstinacy of his spouse in not consenting to satisfy the conditions that were enjoined unto her when she was relaxed from the fearfull Sentence of excommunication And therefore was likely to incurr that fearfull Sentence again if the Assembly shall not have some consideration of his estate who can not forsake her society albeit he be and promiseth ever with Gods grace to be a sinceer Professor of the Religion taught within this countrey and promiseth to do his best endeavours for converting her unto the truth After consideration the Assembly suspends the Sentence untill the next Nationall Assembly Providing that the King remove his daughter out of her company And that the Earle will promise and cause his children to be catechized in the true Religion and that his Majesty will give him command to debarr all other Papists out of his house and deall earnestly upon all occasions with her for her conversion XVII Proposition was made by sundry brethren from diverse parts that some of best judgement be appointed to consider of the chiefest dangers appearing unto the Religion and peace of the countrey and of the the principall causes thereof and how it might be best prevented Brethren were appointed for this effect and having severall dayes communicat their thoughts did find that a chief cause of danger proceeds from miscontentment of some malicious and restless Papists who rage and leave nothing unessayed to work trouble because they are out of all hope to have his Majesties indifferent affection or connivence to them and their Religion during his Reign And of others who by the execution of justice find themselves and their friends to have suffered dammage and to be empaired of their greatness and dependance and so redacted to live under the obedience of lawes otherwise then they were wont And from minations of the Brethren What unplanted churches are within their bounds VIII The Brethren that were appointed to consider the propositions of the Synod of Fife which are written before condescended upon the answers following 1. The Nationall Asse should be appointed and keept according to the Act of Parliament July 2. year 1592. the words are inserted even as they be here above P. 489. 2. If his Majesty shall proceed against Ministers according to his own declaration made and enacted in the assembly at Dundy in the year 1597. the desire of the second article is satisfied and no other thing is meant 3. The Act concerning application in Exercise should not be extended to forbid the application of Gods word unto the generall ends thereof which is lawfull in this manner This point of doctrin serves for refutation of
such an error for the rebuik of such a vice for consorting men in such a case as for personall application it is to be advised whether it should be or not and how far And thinks good that it be argued in the Presbyteries which shall send with their Commissioners unto the next Assembly their resolution with their reasons And in the mean while no nomination to be used in application 4. Let all commissions be used according to the Acts of the assembly 5. Doctors have had and may have vote in the assembly if they have lawfull commission for that effect as it was declared in the assembly at Edinburgh year 1586. and in other assemblies 6. Let the cautions be precisely keept and looked-unto as they were ordained The seventh is answered by the assembly 8. Nothing is to be done in the assemblies unless it be reasoned and advised sufficiently 9. We acquiesce in his Majesties declaration as W. Balcanquall will declair 10. Let their names be given up and order should be taken precisely The 11. Is ended in the assembly 12. We acquiesce in his Ma s declaration who will acquaint the presbyteries as occasion shall require 13 14. Let greater diligence be used and things amended on all hands in time coming according to the Acts of the ass These answers were approved registred IX Commission is given unto 24. Ministers or any nyne of them to attend on the King with power as in the last assembly And other 24. brethren are named adjoyned unto the Commissioners of Provinces that were conveened at Holyrudhouse October 15. year 1600. out of which number his Majesty may make choice of whom he will present unto vaking Benefices who should vote in Parliament X. The assembly ordaines all persons to keep the sabbath and inhibites all kind of fishing and grinding of mills on the sabbath day Under pain of the censure of the Church And ordains the Commissioners to petition his Majesty that a pecuniall mulct may be laid upon the contraveeners of this Act. XI An Act is made for planting the Churches of Annandeal which have been destitute since the Reformation and that all not provided Ministers shall accept a charge there sufficient stipends being provided or to be declared uncapable of the Ministry To this effect a roll of Expectants or Students is written XII The Moderator in name of the Assembly makes humble request unto his Majesty in favour of Robert Bruce that seing he is admitted to return he may be restored unto his former Ministry The King declares that he will do by advice of their commissioners as Robert shall give occasion by his behaviour And because by his Missive unto his Majesty before his way going as also by his ratification and declaration thereof in writ at Perth Iuny 15. last by past he had declared his resolution concerning his Majesties innocency and the guiltiness of Goury and his brother and had promised to divert the people so far as lay in him from their lewd opinions uncharitable misconstructions of his Majesties actions in that matter Therefore his Majesty craves the determination of the Assembly whether the same Robert should make the same declaration in the pulpit as it is at length written in the Missive and explanation thereof Which both were read and ordained to be registred The Assembly voiced that the said Robert should do as he had promised XIII The Assembly ordaines that all Ministers should keep the fifth day of August by conveening their people and teaching that day by giving thanks unto God for preserving the King from that conspiracy of Goury and his brother And the King promiseth that he shall discharge all riotousness drunkenness and other wickedness by open pro●lamation and shall ordain Magistrats to take heed thereunto XIV No marriage should be celebrated in the morning nor with candle light and judgeth it lawfull to celebrat marriage on the Sabbath or any other preaching day indifferently so that no riotousness be used XV. The Sacrament of Baptism should not be refused unto infants if the parent crave it he giving a Christian Confession of his saith and specially that Baptism be not astricted unto particular dayes XVI A summons was read that was raised at the ●nstance of the Synod of Lothian against Dame Elenor Hay Countess of Lithgow charging her to appear before this Assembly to prosecute her appellation from the Sentence of excommunication pronounced against her by the Presbytery of Lithgow With certification if she appeared not the Assembly would ratify that Sentence Alexander Earle of Lithgow gives a large supplication mentioning how grieved he was for the obstinacy of his spouse in not consenting to satisfy the conditions that were enjoined unto her when she was relaxed from the fearfull Sentence of excommunication And therefore was likely to incurr that fearfull Sentence again if the Assembly shall not have some consideration of his estate who can not forsake her society albeit he be and promiseth ever with Gods grace to be a sinceer Professor of the Religion taught within this countrey and promiseth to do his best endeavo●rs for converting her unto the truth After consideration the Assembly suspends the Sentence untill the next Nationall Assembly Providing that the King remove his daughter out of her company And that the Earle will promise and cause his children to be catechized in the true Religion and that his Majesty will give him command to debarr all other Papists out of his house and deall earnestly upon all occasions with her for her conversion XVII Proposition was made by sundry brethren from diverse parts that some of best judgement be appointed to consider of the chiefest dangers appearing unto the Religion and peace of the countrey and of the the principall causes thereof and how it might be best prevented Brethren were appointed for this effect and having severall dayes communicat their thoughts did find that a chief cause of danger proceeds from miscontentment of some malicious and restless Papists who rage and leave nothing unessayed to work trouble because they are out of all hope to have his Majesties indifferent affection or connivence to them and their Religion during his Reign And of others who by the execution of justice find themselves and their friends to have suffered dammage and to be empaired of their greatness and dependance and so redacted to live under the obedience of lawes otherwise then they were wont And from malicious business of some crafty persons who either for the present necessity of their estate or in hope of gain to be had in the change of the government cease not to enflam the hearts of such as they perceive to be miscontented in any rank and make every man to apprehend his own desire in the trouble of the countrey not sparing them who are of most sinceer affection unto Religion and justice as if it were not carried with that integrity as is profest So endeavouring to make the godly and good
jurisdiction and authority of the Church in all things and daily do promote their intended change of the Church Discipline first in bringing us into bondage of a perpetual Dictatura under the Title of Commissioners as the finest cover of their intentions and then into the Antichristian slavery of the Hierarchy that their purposes were discovered by their speeches by presentations of them unto Bishopricks with full authority over their Brethren and several other signs especially by their publick profession in all the Synods lately where it is clear that our Assembly is impeded by their Dictatorship and Lordly Domination which they fear must fall if the Assemblies shall hold and is the main cause of persisting with so hatefull enmity against them for their meeting at Aberdeen because thereby as they judged their almost accomplished enterprize was somewhat retarded It was at that time reported unto the King by these Bishops that Chancelour Seton was upon the Councel of holding the Assembly at Aberdeen wherefore Dunbar was sent down to try him But partly by favour of the Queen and partly by his correspondence with the English Secretary the Trial was not exactly followed and so the Delator John Spotswood then called Bishop of Glascow was disappointed Many other particulars passed that year concerning the Church affairs But for this time to close that Assembly in the beginning of October the King's Will was declared unto a Convention of the Nobility at Lithgow that the six condemned Ministers should be banished out of his Dominions for all their daies and the other eight should be confined some in one place and some in another within the Country remote from their former dwellings and some into Isles severally And a Proclamation was published that if any should hereafter offend in such a high Trespasse they should be punished with all severity and the death due unto Traitours should be inflicted upon them with all rigour and all Ministers were inhibited either in their Sermons or Prayers to recommend the persons that were so sentenced John Forbes went to Middleburgh where he was Minister unto the English Staple Robert Dury was Minister of an English Congregation in Leyden John Welsh went to Bourdeaux where he learned the language so quickly that within one year he was chosen Minister of a French Church And John Sharp became Minister and Professour of Divinity at Dia in the Delphinate where he wrote Cursus Theologicus Symphonia Prophetarum Apostolorum After a year Andrew Duncan and Alexander Strachan purchased liberty to return into their former places Finally because those Assemblies were zealous to keep the Church in purity of Doctrine and free from scandalous Vices they were deserted by some undermined by others and opposed by a third sort and although they were warranted by God's Word and confirmed by the Law of the Realm yet without any repealing Law or just reason that ever was alledged they were in this manner brought to an end AN INDEX Of the Chief Things and Purposes contained in this BOOK In this Index many Particulars are omitted partly for brevity and especially because they may be found by the Names of the Actors and Writers which are in the two Tables at the beginning of the Book A ADam Red a bold Confessor 563. e Aerius his alledged Heresie S 469. The consecrating of Agnus Dei 459. b Albin or Alcuin's doctrine 100 104. Alexander the ●● King of Scots would n●t suffer the Pope's Legate to come into his Realm 447. m Alliance spiritual began 16. m Altars in Christian Churches is a novelty 140 141. Ang●ls should not be worshipped 178. b. 183. m The first Anointing of the Kings of Scotland 291. Annats 454. Anabaptists began in Germany S. 74. Anselm's doctrine 293. Antichrist is the head of Hypocrites 29. b The Pope was called Antichrist 231. b. 235. b. 248. e. 249 m. See Pope Antiphona began 140. m Appeals from the Pope unto a Councel 547. e. 548. b. 558. m An Apology of a wolf a fox and an ass shrieving one another 476. An Apology of a naked bird clad by other birds 479. The Apostles were of equal authority 364. ● Arnold de Vi●lanova's answer unto the King of Sicilies doubts in his purpose of Reformation 471. 473. Arnulph Bishop of Orleans his Oration concerning Appeals to Rome 229. Apocrypha Books 27 b. 333. e. 435 e. 437. m The Church Assemblies of Scotland Their lawfulness S. 230 231. Their warrant and members S 382. Their usefulness S. 492 493. The subordination of other Church-Indicatories unto the Assemblies 492. 496. b Order for number of the members thereof S. 545. The privy Conference thereof S. 391. The first day of each S. 478. e At the instance of Ro. Mongomry a charge is given to the Assembly S. 420. e The Books of Register were kept up and some leafs torn S. 456 the Assembly maketh a general Revoca●i●n of all things done formerly in prejudice of the Discipline and Revenues 487. m. The Assembly appeareth at the K●●g's command before the Convention of Esta●es and protesteth for their Liberty S. 532. A comparison of the former and the latter Assemblies S. 536. The beginning of variance between King James and the Church S. 518. B A Conference at Baden between a Protestant and a Papist S. 318. Baptism taketh away the guilt and not the sin of concupiscence 372. m. They who have not probability that they were Baptized may be Baptized 190. The first Baptizing of Bells 208. m Three Babylons 476. e Bavari● becometh Christian 94. m Beda's Doctrine 95. 99. True Believers cannot perish 477. m Bellum Pontificale continued 170. years 248 e Berengarius his Tene●s 254. 248. Bernard's Advertisements un●o the Pope 322. His Complaints against corruptions and his Faith 334. His Sermon at the Councel of Rhems 341. Beza's Letter unto Jo Knox against the Reliques of Popery S. 376. Bishops and preaching Elders were both one 217. b. 285. m. 354. m. 542 m S 467 471. What was the Office of a Bishop in antient times 471. m. Bishops should be like Shepheards 213. b. They got power in Civil things by Civil Laws 12. m. and ●ft forbidden to meddle with Civil things 143. e. 225. m. They had precedency according to their age or admission 65. m. They should attend their Flock and distribute heavenly Bread 213. b They were taxed of negligence ambition c. 193. e. 194. 210. 222 266 S. 142. They were upon all States Councels and none upon their Councels but themselves S. 166. e. 168. e. They thought it disparagement to Preach 375. e. 549. e. When they pr●a hed they preached not Christ 82. b. They were disswaded from taking arms 80. b. and yet were Warriors 82. m. They have been partakers of Treason and Conspiracies 113. e. 240 303. 306. e. 307. b. 383. m. 400. m 504. m. 505 m. S 365 367. By advice of Bishops much blood hath been spilt 502. e No Lord Bi●hops in Scotland before the year 1050