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A61861 Memorials of the Most Reverend Father in God, Thomas Cranmer sometime Lord Archbishop of Canterbury wherein the history of the Church, and the reformation of it, during the primacy of the said archbishop, are greatly illustrated : and many singular matters relating thereunto : now first published in three books : collected chiefly from records, registers, authentick letters, and other original manuscripts / by John Strype ... Strype, John, 1643-1737. 1694 (1694) Wing S6024; ESTC R17780 820,958 784

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Or whether the footmen shall make them ready or set themselves in array or set upon the enemy or retyre to the standard Even so should the Priests be Gods trump in in his Church So that if he blow such a certain blast that the people may understand they be much edified therby But if he give such a sound as is to the people unknown it is clearly in vain saith S. Paul For he speakes to the air but no man is the better or edified therby Nor knoweth what he should do by that he heareth Furthermore in the same place S. Paul saith That if a man giveth thanks to God in a language to the people unknown how can they say Amen to that they understand not He doth wel in giving thanks to God but that nothing availeth or edifieth the people that know not what he saith And S Paul in one brief sentence concludeth his whole Disputation of that matter Saying I had rather have five words spoken in the Church to the instruction and edifying of the people then ten thousand in a language unknown that edifieth not And for this purpose alledgeth the Prophet Esay Who saith that God wil speak to his people in other tongues and in other languages Meaning therby that he would speak to every country in their own language So have the Greeks the Mass in the Greek tongue the Syrians in the Syry tongue the Armenians in their tongue and the Indians in their own tongue And be you so much addict to the Romish tongue which is the Latine tongue that you wil have your Mas in none other language but the Romish language Christ himself used among the Iews the Iews language and willed his Apostles to do the like in every country whersoever they came And be you such enemies to your own country that you wil not suffer us to laud God to thank him and to use his Sacraments in our own tongue but wil inforce us contrary as wel to al reason as to the word of God So many as be godly or have reason wil be satisfied with this But the mere Papists wil be satisfied with nothing Wherfore I wil no ●onger tary to satisfy them that never wil be satisfied but wil procede to the second part of this Article wherin you say that you wil have neither men nor women communicate with the Priest Alas good simple souls how be you blinded with the Papists How contrary be your Articles one to another You say in your first Article that you wil have al General Councels and Decrees observed and now you go from them your selves You say you wil have no body to communicate with the Priest Hear then what divers Canons Decrees and general Councels say clean against you There is one Decree which saith thus When the Consecration is done let al the people receive the Communion except they wil be put out of the Church And in the Canons of the Apostles in the eighth Chapter is contained That whensoever there is any Mas or Communion if any Bp. Priest Deacon or any other of the Clergy being there present do not communicate except he can shew some reasonable cause to the contrary he shal be put out of the Communion as one that giveth occasion to the people to think evil of the Ministers And in the ninth Chapter of the same Canons of the Apostles and in the General Council held at Antioch is thus written That al christen people that come into the Church and hear the holy Scriptures read and after wil not tarry to pray and to receive the holy Communion with the rest of the people but for some misordering of themselves wil abstain therfrom let them be put out of the Church until by humble knowledging of their fault and by the fruits of Penance and prayers they obtain pardon and forgivenes And the Councel Nicene also sheweth the order how men should sit in receiving the Communion and who should receive first Al these Decrees and general Councels utterly condemn your third Article wherein you wil That the Priest shal receive the Communion alone without any man or woman communicating with him And the whole Church of Christ also both Greeks and Latines many hundred years after Christ and the Apostles do al condemn this your Article Which ever received the Communion in flocks and numbers together and not the Priest alone And besides this the very words of the Mas as it is called shew plainly that it is ordained not only for the Priest but for others also to communicate with the Priest For in the very Canon which they so much extol and which is so holy that no man may know what it is and therfore is read so softly that no man can hear it in that same Canon I say is a prayer concerning this that not only the Priest but also as many beside as communicate with him may be fulfilled with grace and heavenly benediction How aggreeth this prayer with your Article wherein you say that neither man nor woman shal communicate with the priest In another place also of the said Canon the priest prayeth for himself and for al that receive the communion with him that it may be a preparation for them unto everlasting life Which prayer were but a very fond prayer and a very mocking with God if no body should communicate with the priest And the Communion concludes with two prayers in the name of the priest and them that communicate with him wherin they pray thus O Lord that thing which we have taken in our mouth let us take it also with pure minds that this Communion may purge us from our sins and make us partakers of heavenly remedy And besides al this there be an infinite sort of postcommons in the Mas-books Which al do evidently shew that in the Masses the people did communicate with the priest And altho I would exhort every good christen man often to receive the holy Communion yet I do not recite al these things to the intent that I would in this corrupt world when men live so ungodly as they do that the old Canons should be restored again which command every man present to receive the Communion with the priest Which Canons if they were now used I fear that many would receive it unworthily But I speak them to condemn your Articles which would have no body neither man nor woman to be communicated with the priest Which your Article condemneth the old Decrees Canons and General Councels condemneth al the old primitive church al the old antient holy Doctors and Martyrs and al the formes and maner of Masses that ever were made both new and old Therfore eat again this Article if you wil not be condemned of the whole world and of your selves also by your first Article Wherin you wil al Decrees and general Councels to be observed But forasmuch as I have been so tedious in this Article I wil endeavour my self to be shorter in
Sobriety and Diligence in their Vocation and the People to Loyalty and Obedience to the King and the sincere worshipping of God Concerning the Priests he ordered enquiry to be made Whether they preached four times a Year against the usurped Power of the Bishop of Rome and in behalf of the King's Power and Authority within his own Realms Whether in their Common-Prayers they used not the Collects made for the King and mentioned not his Majesty's Name in the same Whether they had destroyed and taken away out of the Churches all Images and Shrines Tables Candlesticks Trindals or Rolls of Wax and all other Monuments of feigned Miracles Idolatry and Superstition and moved their Parishioners to do the same in their own Houses Enquiries were made concerning their due Administration of the Sacraments concerning their preaching God's Word once at least in a Quarter and then exhorting their Parishioners to Works commanded by Scripture and not to Works devised by Mens Fancies as wearing and praying upon Beads and such-like Concerning the plain reciting the Lord's Prayer the Creed and Ten Commandments in English immediately after the Gospel as often as there were no Sermon Concerning the examining of every one that came to Confession in Lent whether they were able to say the Creed the Lord's Prayer and Ten Commandments in English Concerning the having Learned Curats to be procured by such as were absent from their Benefices Concerning having the whole Bible of the largest Volume in every Church and Erasmus's Paraphrase in English Concerning teaching the People of the Nature of the Fast of Lent and other Days in the Year that it was but a mere positive Law Concerning Residence upon Benefices and keeping Hospitality Concerning finding a Scholar in the Universities o● some Grammar-School incumbent on such Priests as had an hundred pounds a Year Concerning moving the Parishioners to pray rather in English than in a Tongue unknown and not to put their Trust in saying over a number of Beads Concerning having the New Testament in Latin and English and Erasmus's Paraphrase which all Priests under the Degree of Batchelors in Divinity were examined about Concerning putting out of the Church-Books the Name of Papa and the Name and Service of Thomas Becket and the Prayers that had Rubricks containing Pardons and Indulgences And many the like Articles Which may be seen by him that will have recourse to them as they are printed in Bishop Sparrow's Collections Those Articles that related to the Laity were Concerning the Letters or Hinderers of the Word of God read in English or preached sincerely Concerning such as went out of the Church in time of the Litany or Common-Prayer or Sermon Concerning ringing Bells at the same time Concerning such as abused the Ceremonies as casting Holy Water upon their Beds bearing about them Holy Bread S. Iohn's Gospel keeping of private Holy-days as Taylors Bakers Brewers Smiths Shoemakers c. did Concerning the misbestowing of Money arising from Cattel or other moveable Stocks of the Church as for finding of Lights Torches Tapers or Lamps and not employed to the poor Man's Chest. Concerning abusing Priests and Ministers Concerning praying upon the English Primer set forth by the King and not the Latin for such as understand not Latin Concerning keeping the Church-Holy-day and the Dedication-day any otherwise or at any other time than was appointed Concerning Commoning and Jangling in the Church at the time of reading the Common-Prayer or Homilies or when there was preaching Concerning maintenance of Error and Heresy Concerning common Swearers Drunkards Blasphemers Adulterers Bawds Enquiries were also to be made after such as were common Brawlers Slanderers such as used Charms Sorceries Inchantments and Witchcraft such as contemned their own Parish-Church and went else-where Concerning Marrying within the Degrees prohibited and without asking the Bannes Concerning the honest discharge of Wills and Testaments in such as were Executors or Administrators Concerning such as contemned married Priests and refused to receive the Communion and other Sacraments at their Hands Concerning such as kept in their own Houses Images Tables Pictures Painting or Monuments of fained Miracles undefaced c. In this Year also the Arch-bishop with the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury granted the Patronage Rectory c. of Ri●eborough Monachorum in the County of Bucks to the Lord Windsor for fourscore and nineteen Years And in Exchange the said Lord granted to the Arch-bishop the Advouson Patronage and Nomination of Midley in Kent for the same duration of Years September the 9 th being Sunday Robert Farrar D. D. was Consecrated Bishop of S. Davids by Thomas Arch-bishop of Canterbury endued with his Pontificals and assisted by Henry Bishop of Lincoln and Nicolas Bishop of Rochester at Chertsey in the Diocess of Winton in the Arch-bishop's House there Then certain Hymns Psalms and Prayers being recited together with a Portion of Scripture read in the vulgar Tongue out of S. Paul's Epistles and the Gospel of S. Matthew the Arch-bishop celebrated the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ. There communicated the Reverend Fathers Thomas Bishop of Ely Thomas Bishop of Westminster Henry Bishop of Lincoln Nicolas Bishop of Rochester and Farrar the new Bishop together with William May Dean of S. Pauls Simon Hains Dean of Exon Thomas Robertson and Iohn Redman Professors of Divinity and others The Arch-bishop then distributed the Communion in English Words This Bishop as it is writ in the Margin of the Register was the first that was consecrated upon the bare Nomination of the King according to the Statute that for that purpose was published in the first Year of his Reign The Form of the King's Letters Patents whereby he constituted Farrar Bishop is extant in the Register dated from Leghes August 1. in the second Year of his Reign At this Bishop of S. Davids I will stay a little proving unhappy by his Preferment unto a Church whose Corruptions while he endeavoured to correct he sunk under his commendable Endeavours He was an active Man and made much use of in Publick Affairs in K. Henry and K. Edward's Days having been first a Canon of S. Mary's in Oxon. He was with Bp Barlow when he was by K. Henry sent Ambassador to Scotland An. 1535. Another time employed in carrying old Books of great Value from S. Oswalds a dissolved Monastery as it seems unto the Arch-bishop of York And in the Royal Visitation in the beginning of King Edward he was one of the King's Visitors being appointed one of the Preachers for his great Ability in that Faculty And being Chaplain to the Duke of Somerset was by his means advanced to be Bishop and upon his Fall he fell into great Troubles This Bishop not long after his first entrance upon his Bishoprick resolved to visit his Diocess like a careful Pastor hearing of very great Corruptions in it and particularly among those that belonged to the Chapter of the Church of Carmarthen and chiefly Thomas
even from the very first Times The Festivals of the Resurrection of the Nativity of Pentecost and of the Death of Christ are all Footsteps of the Old Law And are they to be therefore abolished He wished with all his Heart that the Churches in Germany by this one Loss might obtain their former Liberty As to the second Argument He could not see how it could be asserted upon good Grounds that nothing is to be used by us that is observed in the Popish Religion We must take heed that the Church of God be not prest with too much Servitude that it may not have liberty to use any thing that belonged to the Pope Our Ancestors took the Idol-Temples and used them for Sacred Houses to worship Christ. And the Revenues that were Consecrated to the Gentile Gods and to the Games of the Theatre and of the Vestal Virgins were made use of for the maintenance of the Ministers of the Church when these before had served not only to Antichrist but to the Devil Nor could he presently grant that these Differences of Garments had their Original from the Pope For we read in Ecclesiastical History that Iohn at Ephesus wore a Petalum a Mitre And Pontius Diaconus saith of Cyprian that when he went to be Executed he gave his Birrus to the Executioner his Dalmatica to the Deacons and stood in Linnen And Chrysostom makes mention of the white Garments of Ministers And the Ancients witness that when the Christians came to Christ they changed their Garments and for a Gown put on a Cloak for which when they were mocked by the Heathens Tertullian wrote a Learned Book De Pallio And he knew Hoper was not ignorant that to those that were initiated in Baptism was delivered a white Garment Therefore before the Tyranny of the Pope there was a Distinction of Garments in the Church Nor did he think that in case it were granted that it was invented by the Pope that the iniquity of Popery was so great that whatsoever it touched was so dyed and polluted thereby that good and godly Men might not use it to any holy purpose Hoper himself granted that every humane Invention was not therefore presently to be Condemned It was an humane Invention to communicate before Dinner it was an humane Invention that the things sold in the Primitive Church were brought and laid at the Apostles Feet That he was ready to confess with him that these Garments were an humane Invention and of themselves edified not but it was thought by some conducive to be born with for a time For that it might be a cause of avoiding those Contentions whereby greater Benefits might be in danger to be obstructed But that if hence an occasion of Erring might be given to the Weak they were to be admonished that they should hold these things indifferent and they were to be taught in Sermons that they should judg not God's Worship to be placed in them Hoper had writ that the Eyes of the Standers-by by reason of these Garments would be turned away from thinking of serious things and detained in gazing upon them But this would not happen when the Garments were simple and plain without Bravery and such as hitherto were used in the Service of God But Martyr answered That Use and Custom would take away Admiration And perhaps when the People were moved with Admiration they would the more attentively think of those things that are serious For which end he said the Sacraments seemed to be invented that from the Sight and Sense of them we might be carried to think of Divine Things Hoper urged moreover That whatsoever was not of Faith was Sin But said Martyr That we may enjoy a quiet Conscience in our Doings that of the Apostle seems much to tend and that to the Clean all things are clean saith the same Apostle to Titus and to Timothy that every Creature of God is good He urged also That we ought to have express Scripture for what we do in holy things But Martyr was not of that Mind But that that was enough in general to know by Faith that indifferent things cannot defile those who act with a pure and sincere Mind and Conscience And this was the substance of P. Martyr's Judgment of these things Which might give much light to that Reverend Man in this Controversy though he was not yet convinced nor could comply As Hoper all this while refused the Habits so we may conjecture by a Passage in the former Letter that he liberally declamed against them in the London Pulpits For Martyr takes notice to him of his unseasonable and too bitter Sermons Whether it were for this or his incompliance or both together I know not but at length he was by the Privy-Counsel commanded to keep his House unless it were to go to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury or the Bishops of Ely London or Lincoln for Counsel and Satisfaction of his Conscience and neither to Preach nor Read till he had further Licence from the Council But notwithstanding this Command he kept not his House and writ a Book and Printed it intituled A Confession of his Faith Written in such a manner that it gave more distaste and wherein was contained Matter he should not have written He went about also complaining of the King's Councellors as Martyr wrote in a private Letter to Bucer On Ianuary the 13 th The Court then at Greenwich he appeared there before the Council the Arch-bishop being then present touching the matter of not wearing the Apparel and for disobeying the Council Who for this Disobedience and for that he continued in his former Opinion of not wearing the Apparel prescribed for Bishops to wear committed him to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury's Custody either there to be reformed or further punished as the obstinacy of his Cause required Being with the Arch-bishop he did his endeavour to satisfy him But Hoper was as immoveable to whatsoever the said ABp could propound and offer as he was before with Ridley So the Arch-bishop signified to the Council that he could bring him to no Conformity but that he declared himself for another way of Ordination than was established The Effect of this was that on Ianuary 27 Upon this Letter of the Arch-bishop That Hoper could not be brought to any Conformity but rather persevering in his Obstinacy they are the words of the Council-Book coveted to prescribe Orders and necessary Laws of his Head it was agreed that he should be committed to the Fleet. And a Letter was drawn for the Arch-bishop to send Mr. Hoper to the Fleet upon the occasion aforesaid and another Letter to the Warden of the Fleet to receive him and to keep him from the Conference with any Person saving the Ministers of that House This Disobedience of Hoper to the Council's Orders will make the severity of the Council less liable to censure Neither was Cranmer any other ways
part therof that then not giving too much to your own minds fantasies and opinions nor having therof any open reasoning in your open tavernes or alehouses ye shal have recourse to such learned men as be or shal be authorized to preach and declare the same So that avoyding al contentions and disputation in such alehouses and other places unmeet for such conferences and submitting your opinion to the judgments of such learned men as shal be appointed in this behalf his Grace may wel perceive that you use this most high benefit quietly and charitably every one of you to the edifying of himself his wife and family in al things answering to his Highnes good opinion conceived of you in the advauncement of vertue and suppressing of Vice without failing to use such discrete quietnes and sober moderation in the premisses as is aforesaid as you tender his Graces pleasure and intend to avoyd his high indignation and the peril and danger that may ensue to you and every of you for the contrary And God save the King NUM XXIV The Answer or Declaration of Richard Bishop of Chichester in the presence of the Kings Majesty against the sixth Reason or argument of John Lambert concerning the most holy and blessed Sacrament of the Altar THese are the words of his sixth Article Paul doth take it for a sore inconvenince Deducere Christum ex alto Rom. 10. And yet must the Priests do so bringing his natural body into the Sacrament Or else they cannot bring the same body into the Sacrament Which I believe rather The Answer of the Bishop BY this reason you may evidently perceive the Vanity and also the malice of this man So that you may judg by what spirit he is led to make such an argument against so high and precious a mystery as this is What christen man is so ignorant that knoweth not this to be evidently true that this most holy Sacrament hath not his Vertue of the Priest which is a mortal man and many times a sinner For he is but a minister and a very instrument by whom God worketh S. Chrysostome saith that the minister is as it were the Pen God is the hand The grace the vertue is of God In the 27 th Hom. in the second Tome So doth teach the Apostle to the Corinthians in the third chapt of the first Epistle What is Apostle saith he What is Paul Ministers of him in whom ye believe and as he hath given to every one I have planted saith S. Paul Apollo hath watered but God hath given the encrease Wherfore neither he that planteth nor he that watereth is ought but he that giveth the encrease For men must esteem us as Ministers of Christ saith he in the next chapter By these words he proveth that the minister gives no effect or virtue but only God S. Augustin ad Cresconium Grammaticum saith also expresly That if there be among good ministers one better then another the Sacrament is no better given by the better and it is no worse given by an evil man There is for this purpose a goodly saying of Eusebius Emissenus which was much persecuted by the Arians These are his words Invisibilis Sacerdos visibiles creaturas in substantiam corporis sanguinis sui verbi sui secreta potestate convertit No Christen man doubteth who is this invisible Priest which is our Savior the high Priest the perpetual Priest as the Apostle saith Ad Heb. 7. Which to our carnal eyes is invisible and otherwise may not be seen but by the eyes of our soul and faith onely This invisible Priest saith Eusebius converteth and turneth the visible creatures of bread and wine not only into his body and bloud but into the substance of his body and bloud It is not then the Priest that worketh this work nor bringeth Christ out of heaven as this man mockingly and scornfully writeth in this Article but it is Christ himself For as S. Austin saith Idem est Mediator qui offert qui offertur And what spirit this man hath towards this most holy sacrament you may wel conjecture and evidently perceive his malignity which not only gathereth a certain number of vain arguments together to the number of eight that it might appear to the simple ignorant people as though it were a great foundation which he hath for his detestable purpose and yet as I say they are al vain and grounded only upon gross natural reason which can in no wise attain to this high mystery but also in so grave weighty and most reverend cause as this is he dallieth mocketh and scorneth in this fond reason without any reason saying that the Priest must bring the body of Christ out of heaven But it is little to be weighed in this man though that he scorneth the ministration of the Priest sith that he so depraveth his very Lord and Master But in case that he should say that he doth not scorn the ministration of the Priest then must he needs be very ignorant to suppose in any wise that the Priest worketh any thing in this or any other Sacrament more then as I have before said In this argument also he alledgeth one part of scripture in the tenth chapter to the Romans to blind also the simple people that they should think al that he speaketh is the very scripture And surely this place of scripture maketh evidently against him and such as he is For it is written against Infidels such as wil not believe the word of God written but would yet have knowledge from heaven And so the Apostle there maketh example of him that would not believe that Christ is ascended but notwithstanding the testimony of scripture he demandeth Quis ascendet in coelum Hoc est Christum de coelo deducere saith the Apostle Wherefore the Apostle monisheth every Christen man in this maner Nè dixeris in corde tuo Quis ascendet c. That is to say Think not in thy mind Have no such doubt to ask Who ascended or how but believe the scripture For as Moses in the 30 th Chap. of Deuteronomy saith Thou shalt not need to seek into heaven for the knowledg of these things it is not set nor left in heaven it is not above thee it is not far from thee but the Word of God is nigh thee even in thy mouth as it were and ready at hand Believe that and do according to that For so it was answered to the rich man in the 16 th Chap. of Luke Thy brethren have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them And If they wil not hear nor believe them they wil not believe any one that shal come from hence Whersore Chrysostom in the former tenth Chapter of Paul teacheth even Christen men in these things of the Faith in no wise to ask or search how it may be but leaving this infirmity and weaknes of our thoughts and reasons let us receive with a certain
no And whether any other but only a Bp. may make a Priest or no 11. Scripture warranteth a Bp. obeying high powers as the Prince christianed to order a Priest per manuum impositionem cum oratione And so it hath been from the beginning of others scripture speaketh not   12. Whether in the N. Testament be required any Consecration of a Bp. or Priest or only appointing to the office be sufficient 12. Manuum Impositio cum oratione is required Which is a Consecration So as only Appointing is not sufficient   13. Whether if it fortune a Prince Chri●stian learned to conquer certain Dominions of Infidels having none but temporal learned men with him it be defended by Gods law that he and they may preach and teach the Word of God there or no and also make and institute Priests or no 13. It is to be thought that God in such cases assisting the perfection of such an enterprize would sometime teach and inspire the Conscience of such a Prince what he should and might do more then is yet openly taught by the Scripture Which in that case were a good warrant to follow For a secret Vocation supplieth where an open wanteth A reason Necessity in things absolutely necessary containeth in it order law and authority   14. Whether it be forefended by Gods law that if it so fortuned that al the Bishops and Priests of a realm were dead and that the Word of God should remain there unpreached the Sacrament of Baptism and others unministred that the King of that Region should make Bps and Priests to supply the same or no 14. This Question is without the compas of Scripture   Since the beginning of Christs church when Christ himself made distinction of Ministers the order hath a determination from one to another per manuum impositionem cum oratione How it should begin again of another fashion where it faileth by a case Scripture telleth not ne Doctors write of it that I have read   15. Whether a man be bound by authority of this Scripture Quorum remiseritis c. and such like to confes his secret deadly sins to a Priest if he may have him or no 15. Bound ordinarily   16. Whether a Bp. or a Priest may excommunicate 16. They may being before of their Prince authorized to minister   For what crime For open public deadly sins   And whether only by Gods Law Of Excommunication by others we read not in the new Testament   17. Whether Unction of the sick with oyl to remit venial sins as it is now used be spoken of in the Scripture or in any ancient authors 17. The thing is in Scripture and in antient Authors according wherunto the use should be How it is indeed used is a matter of fact and not of learning NUM XXVIII The judgment of another Bishop upon the aforesaid Questions I. TO the first Scripture sheweth not what it is but useth the word Sacramentum in Latin for the word Mysterium in Greek II. Sacrament by the Authors is Sacrae rei Signum or Visibile Signaculum Sacrosanctum Signaculum Visibile Verbum Visibilis forma invisibilis gratiae and perfect definition we find none III. In Scripture we find no determine number of Sacraments IV. There be very many in the most general signification and there is no precise or determinate number of Sacraments in the ancient authors V. Not only to the Seven but to many mo We find in old Authors Matrimony holy Communion Baptism Confirmation Order Penance and extreme Unction It is doubted of the number of Sacraments VI. As touching the determine number of Seven only we find neither in the Scripture ne antient authors any such doctrine that should be seven only VII Of Baptism Scripture speaketh that by it sins be remitted Of Eucharistia that we be united by it to Christ and receive spiritual nourishment to the comfort of our souls and remission of our sins Of Matrimony that the act of it is made lawful and without sin and Grace given wherby to direct ordinately the lusts and appetites of the flesh Of Penance that by it we be restored again to the favor of God from which we did fal by sin Of Orders that by it Grace is given to Ministers effectually in preaching of the word of God and Ministration of the Sacraments Of Confirmation which is contained in Scripture speaking De impositione manuum post baptisma it appeareth by Scripture how therby encrease of grace is given Of Inunction of the sick Scripture speaks that by Unction of the sick and prayer of the Priests comfort is given to sick and sins be forgiven him VIII Impositionem manuum post Baptisma which we cal Confirmation we read in the Scripture But that it was done Chrismate we find not in the scripture expressed But in the old Authors we find that Chrisma hath been used in the same Confirmation IX Making of Bps hath two parts Appointment and Ordering Appointment which the Apostles by necessity made by common election and sometime by their own several assignment could not then be done by Christen Princes Because at that time they were not And now at these dayes appertaineth to Christen Princes and Rulers But in the ordering wherin Grace is conferred as afore the Apostles did follow the rule taught by the holy Ghost Per manuum impositionem cum Oratione jeju●io X. Christ made the Apostles first which were of his making both Priests and Bps. But whether at one time some doubt After that the Apostles made both Bps. and Priests The names whereof in the Scripture be confounded XI A Bp. having authority of the Christen Prince to give orders may by his ministery given to him of God in Scripture ordain a Priest And we read not that any other not being a Bp. hath since the beginning of Christs church ordained a Priest XII Onely Appointment is not sufficient but Consecration that is to say Imposition of hands with fasting and prayer is also required For so the Apostles used to order them that were appointed and so have been used continually and we have not read the contrary XIII In that necessity the Prince and his learned men should preach and teach the word of God and baptize But as for making and constituting Priests the Prince shal and may then do as God shal then by inspiration teach him Which God hath promised to do alwayes to his Church in reveling and teaching every necessary knowledg where any doubt requiring discussion doth arise XIV The answer to the other Question next before dissolveth this XV. He that knoweth himself guilty of any secret deadly sins must if he will obtain the benefit of Absolution ministred by the Priest confes the same secret sins unto him Absolution to be ministred by a Priest if a convenient Priest may be had is necessary York Duresm Carelyl Corwen Simon
the next IV. Your fourth Article is this WE wil have the Sacrament hang over the high Altar and there to be worshipped as it was wont to be and they which wil not therto consent we wil have them dy like Heretics against the holy Catholic faith What say you O ignorant people in things pertaining to God Is this the holy Catholic faith that the Sacrament should be hanged over the Altar and worshipped And be they Heretics that wil not consent therto I pray you who made this Faith Any other but the Bishops of Rome And that after more then a thousand years after the Faith of Christ was ful and perfect Innocent III. about 1215 years after Christ did ordain that the Sacrament and Chrism should be kept under lock and key But yet no motion he made of hanging the Sacrament over the high Altar nor of the worshiping of it After him came Honorius III. and he added further commanding that the Sacrament should be devoutly kept in a clean place and sealed and that the priest should often teach the people reverendly to bow down to the host when it is lifted up in the Mass time and when the priests should cary it to the sick folkes And altho this Honorius added the worshipping of the Sacrament yet he made no mention of the hanging therof over the high Altar as your Article proporteth Nor how long after or by what means that came first up into this realm I think no man can tel And in Italy it is not yet used until this day And in the beginning of the Church it was not only not used to be hanged up but also it was utterly forbid to be kept And wil you have al them that wil not consent to your Article to dy like heretics that hold against the Catholic faith Were the Apostles and Evangelists heretics Were the Martyrs and Confessors heretics Were al the old Doctors of the Church heretics Were al christen people heretics until within three or four hundred years last past that the Bishops of Rome taught them what they should do and believe All they before rehearsed neither hanged the Sacrament over the Altar nor worshiped it nor not one of them al spake any one word either of the hanging up or worshiping of the Sacrament Mary they speak very much of the worshiping of Christ himself setting in heaven at the right hand of his Father And no man doth duely receive the Sacrament except he so after that maner do worship Christ whom he spiritually receiveth spiritually feedeth and nourisheth upon and by whom spiritually he liveth and continueth that life that is towards God And this the Sacrament teacheth us Now to knit up this Article shortly Here is the issue of this matter that you must either condemn of heresy the Apostles Martyrs Confessors Doctors and al the holy Church of Christ until the time of Innocentius and Honorius because they hanged not the Sacrament over the Altar to be worshiped or else you must be condemned your selves by your own Article to dy like heretics against the holy Catholic faith Now to your fifth Article V. Your fifth Article is this WE wil have the Sacrament of the Altar but at Easter delivered to the Lay-people and then but in one kind Methinks you be like a man that were brought up in a dark dungeon that never saw light nor knew nothing that is abroad in the world And if a friend of his pitying his ignorance and state would bring him out of his dungeon that he might se the light and come to knowledg he being from his youth used to darknes could not abide the light but would wilfully shut his eyes and be offended both with the light and with his friend also A most godly Prince of famous memory K. Henry VIII our late Soveraign Lord pitying to se his Subjects many years so brought up in darknes and ignorance of God by the erroneous doctrines and superstitions of the Bp. of Rome with the counsil of al his Nobles and learned men studied by al means and that to his no little danger and charges to bring you out of your said ignorance and darknes unto the true light and knowledg of Gods word And our most dread Soveraign Lord that now is succeding his father as wel in this godly intent as in his realmes and dominions hath with no less care and diligence studied to perform his fathers godly intent and purpose And you like men that wilfully shut their own eyes refuse to receive the light saying you wil remain in your darknes Or rather you be like men that be so far wandred out of the right way that they can never come to it again without good and expert guides and yet when the guides would tel you the truth they would not be ordered by them but would say unto them Wee wil have and follow our own wayes And that you may understand how far you be wandred from the ●ight way in this one Article wherin you wil have the Sacrament of the Altar delivered to the Lay-people but once in the year and then but under one kind be you assured that there was never such law nor such request made among christen people until this day What injury do you to many godly persons which would devoutly receive it many times and you command the priest to deliver it them but at Easter Al learned men and godly have exhorted christen people altho they have not commanded them often to receive the Communion And in the Apostles time the people at Ierusalem received it every day as it appeares by the manifest word of the Scripture And after they received it in some places every day In some places four times in the week in some three times some twice commonly every where at the least once in the week In the beginning when men were most godly and fervent in the holy Spirit then they received the Communion daily But when the Spirit of God began to be more cold in mens hearts and they waxed more worldly than godly then their desire was not so hot to receive the Communion as it was before And ever from time to time as the world waxed more wicked the more the people withdrew themselves from the holy Communion For it was so holy a thing and the threatnings of God be so sore against them that come therto unworthily that an ungodly man abhorreth it and not without cause dare in no wise approch therunto But to them that live godly it is the greatest comfort that in this world can be imagined And the more godly a man is the more sweetnes and spiritual plesure and desire he shal have often to receive it And wil you be so ungodly to command the Priest that he shal not deliver it to him but at Easter and then but only in one kind When Christ ordained both the kinds as wel for the Lay-men as for the Priests and that to be eaten and drunken at
quae scripserint ut respondeat Has itaque Lucubrationes vobis insignissimi Heroes quos Christus praecipuos sub potentissimo Rege nostro Edovardo Reipub. judices constituit exhibendas esse censui nihil prorsus ambigens eam esse vestram in omnes veritatis studiosos benignitatem eam aequitatem eam veri judicij certitudinem ut sine omni personarum acceptione justam causae conditionem velitis semper attendere neque ad dextram neque ad sinistram ulla occasione ducti quovismodo a veritate declinare non ignorantes in illum finem vobis concessam esse potestatem tum a summo judice Deo tum ab ipsa Regia majestate apud quam pro vestra in C●ristum charitate agere dignemini quo mihi indigenae ac genuino Regis nostri subdito Christi causam quoad possum curanti tantum in evulgando hoc disputationum ac annotationum Volumine efficere liceat quantum Petro Martyri extraneo veritatis adversario audere hactenus fuerit impunè permissum Rem sanè justam ni fallor postulo Neque profectò in scriptis his est unde pius quispiam offendatur In impios autem ut duriùs agamus exposcit veritatis ratio quae nequaquam charitati refragatur Duriùs enim contra errones obstinatos egerunt Patres nec illis unquam pepercerunt quin veluti Christi hostes verbis factisque contemnerent atque acerbissimis reprehensionibus persequerentur Iohannes Baptista Pharisaeos incredulos viperarum vocavit progenies Christus ipse malos illos Iudaeos mendaces appellavit diaboli filios Sed Petrum ipsum a morte obeunda dehortantem minúsque in hoc sapientem quae Dei sunt Satanam taxando nuncupavit Unde certò edocemur nos posse citra charitatis praejudicium adversarios in causis religionis severis ac mordacibus verbis impetere atque perstringere Denique haud temerè hoc quicquid est opusculi evulgo sed summae vestrae prudentiae eximio candori qui illi regum omnium pulcherrimo flori jam sese auspicatissimè diffundenti a consilijs estis humilis suppléxque ipsum offero obnixè vos exoratos habens ut cum privilegio ad Christi honorem ac multorum utilitatem divulgetur Id quod vestrae Dominationes ab illa lucis aurora nimirum Serenissimo Rege nostro Edovardo jam a paterno somno orbem illustri virtutum omnium lumine spargente facile spero obtinebunt cum gratia consequentur Hanc auroram splendidissimam felicissimè procedere atque in perfectum diem crescere optimaque Optimi patris vestigia imitari faciat Deus Opt. Max. qui illum unicum nostrum decus praesidium Vósque sub ipso Moderatores Reip. primarios aliosque illius studiosos universos diuturnissimè incolumes servet NUM XLVI The sentencious sayinges of Master Martin Bucer upon the Lordes Supper 1. SO playnely so faythfully and also so warely as can be possyble we ought to speake of the mysteryes of the holy supper even as we ought to do of all other Christes mysteryes to th ende that the Children of God may most clearely perseyve what Christ doth meane and the Adversaryes to have as small occasion as can be eyther to pervert or els to darke and make dymme the truth of Christ. 2. These thinges we cannot better attaine then by the godly and right expoundyng of the wordes of the holy ghost not allowing any false sygnyfications of them both certaynly affirmyng the thinges whiche be agreeable unto this mystery and also denying the thinges whiche be contrarye ther unto 3. We must certaynely acknowledge that the holy ghost most clearly most faythfully and most warely hath dyscrybed all the sacraments of our salvation 4. But the holy ghost by Christes own mouth by the mouth of the Apostles and by the scripture delyvereth unto us the sacrament of the Lordes Supper even as he doth all other Sacramentes by the words and fourme of delyveryng gevying and receyving 5. And three thinges acknowledgeth hearein to be geven and taken bread and wyne beyng the signes of the body and bloud of the Lord and assurance of the new testament and remyssion of our synnes 6. For when he had taken bread and wyne and geven thanckes he gave them to hys dyscyples to be eaten and drunken and said moreover that by these sygnes he gave therin his body that was offered for us and lykewise his bloud which was shed for us saying also that by this bloude the new testament of grace was assured and the forgeuenes of synnes purchased 7. And he defyneth or describeth the right use and receyving of this Sacrament to be that partaking of the body and bloud of Christ wherby we beyng many are one bread and one body as many of us as be partakers of one Bread and one Cup of the Lord. This body doubtles is that body wherof Christ is the head and into the which we are baptised For by the regeneration we are made members of his body fleshe of his flesh bone of his bones and so we be one flesh with him 1 Cor. 12. Ephes. 5. 8. That fellowship which we have with the father and the sonne and with all the sayntes wherof S. Iohn speaketh 1 Iohn 1 chap. of his epistle is geven and taken in the Lords supper rightly admynistred and receyved That unity also which we have with the father and the sonne and with all the saints for the which the Lord prayed Iohn 17. by the which Christ is in us as the Father is in him and we in theym I meane in the father and the sonne is geven and receyved in the same supper rightly administred wherof the Lord also speaketh he that eateth my flesh and drincketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him John 6. 9. This is the partaking and the unity of an heavenlye regeneration of a new creature of the high mystery of God which cannot be understand and knowen but by fayth even as fayth is perceyved and felt by his effectes as by judgement wyll and by the new heavenly and godly workes 10. All sensyble and worldly imagynations all fansying of joyned or contynuall places are to be put away from this partycipation and unytie which in the word of God is knowen to be mervelous and with reverence to be pondered and dyscussed by the new mans lyvyng as by his effectes 11. The Holy Ghost thought it not inough to declare unto us how that we be endued wyth the spirit of Christ by his merites but he doth publish also that we do lyve by his intercession and working He furthermore assureth us that we have him with us that he dwelleth in our hartes and that we receyve him in the holy supper These be the thinges which we ought to tell openly and to fortefye 12. These are Metaphors and borowed speeches lyke as other wherby we expounde the matters of regeneration For unto such matters as the naturall man perceyveth not
world it is not for mee to read the Scriptures that belongeth to them that have bidden the world farewel which live in solitarines and contemplation and have been brought up and continually nursilled in Learning and religion To this answering What sayest thou Man saith hee is it not for thee to study and to read the Scripture because thou art encumbred and distract with cares and business So much the more is it behoofful for thee to have defence of Scriptures how much thou art the more distressed in worldly dangers They that bee free and far from trouble and intermedling of worldly things Live in safeguard and tranquillity and in the calm and within a sure haven Thou art in the midst of the Sea of worldly wickednes and therefore thou needest the more of ghostly succour and comfort They sit far from the strokes of battaile and far out of gun-shot and therfore they bee but seldome wounded Thou that standest in the forefront of the Host and nighest to thine enemies must needs take now and then many strokes and bee grievously wounded and therefore thou hast most need to have thy remedies and medicines at hand Thy Wife provoketh thee to anger thy Child giveth thee occasion to take sorrowand pensiveness thine enemies ly in wait for thee thy friend as thou takest him Sometime envieth thee thy neighbour misreporteth thee or piketh quarrels against thee thy Mate or partner undermineth thee thy Lord Judge or Justice threatneth thee Poverty is painful unto thee the loss of thy dear and welbeloved causeth thee to mourn Prosperity exalteth thee Adversity bringeth thee low Briefly so divers and so manifold occasions of cares tribulations and temptations beset thee and besiege thee round about Where canst thou have armour or fortress against thine assaults Where canst thou have salves for thy sores but of holy Scripture Thy flesh must needs be prone and subject to fleshly lusts which daily walkest and art conversant among women seest their beautyes set forth to the ey hearest their nice and wanton words smellest their balm civet and musk with other like provocations and stirrings Except thou hast in a readiness wherewith to suppress and avoyd them which cannot elsewhere bee had but onely out of the holy Scriptures Let us read and seek all remedies that wee can and all shall bee little enough How shal wee then do if wee suffer and take daily wounds and when wee have done wil sit still and search for no medicines Dost thou not mark and consider how the Smith Mason or Carpenter or any other handy craftes man what need soever hee bee in what other shift hee make hee will not sell nor lay to pledg the tools of his occupation For then how should hee work his feat or get his living thereby Of like mind and affection ought wee to bee towards holy Scripture For as mallets hammers sawes chesells axes and hatchets bee the tools of their occupation So bee the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and all holy Writers inspired by the holy Ghost the instruments of our Salvation Wherefore let us not stick to buy and provide us the Bible that is to say the Books of holy Scripture and let us think that to bee a better jewel in our house then either gold or silver For like as thieves bee loth to assault an house where they know to bee good armour and artillery so wheresoever these holy and ghostly books be occupied there neither the Devil nor none of his Angels dare come neer And they that occupy them bee in much safeguard and have a great consolation and bee the readier unto all goodness the slower unto all evil And if they have done any thing amiss anon even by the sight of the books their consciences bee admonished and they wax sorry and ashamed of the fact Peradventure they wil say unto mee How and if wee understand not that wee read that is contained in the Books What then suppose thou understand not the deep and profound Mysteries of Scripture yet can it not bee but that much fruit and holines must come and grow unto thee by the reading For it cannot bee that thou shouldest bee ignorant in al things alike For the holy Ghost hath so ordered and attempered the Scriptures that in them as wel Publicans fishers and sheepherds may find their edification as great Doctors their erudition For those books were not made to vain glory like as were the Writings of the Gentile Philosophers and Rhetoricians to the intent the makers should bee had in admiration for their high stiles and obscure manner of writing wherof nothing can bee understanded without a Master or an Expositor But the Apostles and Prophets wrot their books so that their special intent and purpose might bee understanded and perceived of every reader which was nothing but the edification or amendment of the life of them that read or hear it Who is it that reading or hearing read in the Gospel Blessed are they that bee meek Blessed are they that bee merciful Blessed are they that bee of clean heart and such other like places can perceive nothing except hee have a Master to teach him what it meaneth Likewise the signs and miracles with al other histories of the doings of Christ or his Apostles who is there of so simple wit and capacity but hee may bee able to perceive and understand them These bee but excuses and clokes for the rain and coverings of their own idle slothfulnes But still ye wil say I cannot understand it What mervail How shouldest thou understand if thou wilt not read nor look upon it Take the books into thine hands read the whole story and that thou understandest keep it well in memory that thou understandest not read it again and again If thou can neither so come by it counsail with some other that is better Learned Go to thy Curate and Preacher shew thy self to bee desirous to know and learn And I doubt not but God seeing thy diligence and readines if no man else teach thee wil himself vouchsafe with his holy Spirit to illuminate thee and to open unto thee that which was locked from thee Remember the Eunuch of Candace Queen of Ethiopia which albeit hee was a man of a wild and barbarous country and one occupied with worldly cares and busines yet riding in his charet hee was reading the Scripture Now consider if this man passing in his journey was so diligent as to read the Scripture what thinkest thou of like was hee wont to do sitting at home Again hee letteth not to read albeit he did not understand What did hee then trowest thou after that when hee had learned and gotten understanding For that thou mayest wel know that he understood not what hee read harken what Philip saith there unto him Vnderstandest thou what thou readest And hee nothing ashamed to confess his ignor●nce answered How should I understand having no body to shew mee the●way Loe when hee lacked one