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A05382 The historie of the defendors of the catholique faith Discoursing the state of religion in England, and the care of the politique state for religion during the reignes of King Henrry 8. Edward. 6. Queene Marie. Elizabeth. And our late souereigne, King Iames. ... With all, declaring by what means these kings & queenes haue obtained this title, defendor of the faith, and wherein they haue deserued it ... By Christopher Lever. Lever, Christopher, fl. 1627.; Hulsius, Friedrich van, b. 1580, engraver. 1627 (1627) STC 15537; ESTC S108541 141,977 384

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would appeare most glorious Sixthly Againe the variable change of mans life whereby he is violently carried to many disagreeing ends sometime to the better sometime to the worse according to the seuerall power of occasions insomuch as in this respect a man is like a vessell at Sea driuen with many contrarie windes too and fro alwaies in the extremities of storme and wearie passage neither can any man ariue his peacefull port before death bring him to his graue his life being nothing but a breath of contrarie windes bearing him to indure the misery of many hard and variable fortunes And this euill is most sensible to those vnto whom Fortune hath bene most gratious who enioying the pleasures of life with full appetite and by the change of fortune forced to change that state wherin they thought themselues most happie For then is aduersity in full strength being in him whose former life hath bene most prosperous for the common induring of bitternes and misery dulleth the edge thereof and maketh it by much lesse sensible to him whome Custome hath made familiar with griefe neither are mens natures so inclineable to the good as to the bad alteration it being generall in all men to moue themselues to their owne destruction the motion to perfection not being our owne but the worke of Grace which onely hath the glorie of euery good worke Seuenthly It were needlesse to giue particular instance of this mutability of fortune euery particular man hauing instance in himselfe to witnesse it and for those of extraordinary glory and greatnesse we may remember that Romane Conquerour who passing the streets of Rome in the glorie of his Triumph had his braines beaten forth with a Tyle which by casualty fell vpon him or that of better memorie the Duke of Somerset the occasion of this discourse who from the highest degree of a Subiect fell into the ignominie of Treason and vntimely timely death And therefore the antient Romanes vnderstanding ●he miserie of variable fortune ordained that when any of their worthy Captaines should ride in triumph a slaue should ride with him in his triumphall Chariot holding fast with his slauish hand the lawrell Crowne vpon the Conquerours head who then did triumph both to moderate the vaine glory of the Conquerour and also to remember him to what condition he himselfe was subiect and therefore in respect of mutability of fortune is mans life most miserable no man being able to secure himselfe in any reasonable condition of life Eighthly But that which of all other is most burdensome is Discontent the disease of the soule and that which of all other infirmities is most dangerous and hard to cure especially in spirits of best apprehension and in them who haue aspired the reputation of high place For the spirits of great men are not moued to impatience without dangerous euents because their anger maketh them willing and their greatnes maketh them able to reuenge And therfore such men are neuer discōntent but it prouoketh either their owne or other mens destruction neither is this euill tied to particular men onely but like a generall Plague it spreads it selfe ouer all degrees of men though not in like vehemencie For the best and the worst the basest and the most noble haue at some time their discontents whereby they are offended in themselues and wish to die and that which is more admirable those men renowned for holinesse of life haue had this loathing to liue and desired to die as Iob Elias and many other holy men which may well conclude the misery of a discontented minde and how insupportable it is in his extremity for as the soule exceedeth the body in the excellencie of their Natures So the grieuances of the soule are much more sensible to our faculties then those of our bodies because griefe is properly belonging to the soule and to the body onely by consequence or participation And if I were to define the greatest miserie on earth next to that of hell sin and damnation I should call it discontent in his extremitie because next the sorrow of sinne the liuing part of man his soule hath not any thing of like torment and affliction and as all other miseries are the seed from whence doth proceed this Monster Discontent So from discontent can be expected no better then destruction and death Ninthly The last misery of our life is Death the which at one stroake doth reuenge all the euill of mans life and this howsoeuer in it selfe it be not euill yet in mens generall vnderstanding it is thought the worst of all euills and the most fearefull of all other miseries And therefore the very name of death hath oftentimes stroake astonishment and terror in the hearts of tyrants and euill men knowing that death was an enemy against whom there was no resistāce hauing preuailed against them of the first age though they liued many hundreds of yeares For if the honours and pleasures of this life were infinite and the enioyers of them eternall then were not the life of man so miserable a condition but hauing death to controule the most glorious among men and to depriue them of their prosperity and honours in this respect the best of mans life is no better then misery and griefe because he foreseeth the end of all his prosperity the remembrance of death sowring the greatest part of the pleasures of life euerie man hauing griefe to loose that wherein he so much delighteth Tenthly Yet Death though his power be geuerall ouer all flesh is not therefore a misery to all men but to many an end most happie and desired For though it be a curse for sin to be mortall die yet is Death most happie to them that die well God by the death of his Sonne hauing reconsiled himselfe to his seruant Man which by no other meanes could be made immortall But this condition of happinesse is not in the Nature of Man but in the fauour and grace of God And therfore is death that which good men hope and bad men feare the poore mans comfort and the rich mans terror and that which maketh the King and the Subiect the rich and the poore equall making of euery mans flesh but earth and putrifaction And therefore the life of man euen from the wombe to the Graue is nothing but misery and vexation of Sipirit no naturall man hauing the pleasures thereof but with such limitation as maketh pleasure it selfe burdensome Eleuenthly The holy and good men of the world not otherwise regarding life then as a time wherein to exercise their Christian offices and to such there is no miserie neither in life nor death happie are such to whom God shall giue Grace to dispise the vaine glorie of earth and that vse the creatures of God with christian moderation not
in the world saue her sister the most famous Elizabeth who hath exceeded her and al the world in the honour of true deseruing Fourthly Yet notwithstanding all these rare excellencies of nature merit little but only pittie for if the best beauty of nature haue not the benefit of grace the greatest ornaments therof are then but punishment to them that so enioy them And therefore they that haue not the gifts of grace haue nothing of worth though they haue all that nature can giue them and happie had Q. Marie bene if nature had giuen her lesse and grace more because any little breath of Gods Spirit is more worth than all other blessings whatsoeuer For nature adornes the body grace the soule of euery one that hath it commonly where the power of wit great spirit is in any one Subiect not moderated by grace they are then meanes to make the enioyers of them most dangerous instruments because nature cannot moue it self to good but naturally to euill and as the naturall motion is more easie to the mouer than the violent So the gifts of nature are more inclinable to euill than to good ends being moued to euill by their owne proper motion but to goodnesse by the motion of grace which in all naturall things is violent against nature And therfore was the Q. more dangerous hauing so much of nature because she was therby armed for euill the want of grace making her runne her natural course her great spirit other naturall induments spurring her forward in her euill passage whereby she became enemie to her self mouing her self to her own destruction Fifthly But that which made Q. Marie monstrous in her euill was the two much credit she gaue to euill counsell suffering her selfe to be transported by the violent spirits of euill and reuengefull men who conceiuing a grounded displeasure for some hard vsage they indured in K. Edwards time now take aduantage to reuenge the cause for which they had indured displeasure these men like euill spirits breathed the spirits of indignation into the Queenes heart moued her to effect most bloodie horrible deeds to the great displeasure of God and dishonour of her princely place Sixthly for it cannot be imagined that a Ladie of her spirit being in humane respects mercifull compassionate would haue entred her gouernement with such tyrannie terror bearing in both hands destruction like Reuenge her self entring the stage of her gouernement with fire blood had she not bene moued thereto by euil perswasion Neither can it be but the Q. conscience would condemne the course of her violent proceeding that she would iudge the large effusiō of christiā blood stood not with the honour of her name nor with the Truth of Religion yet so powerfull is the authority of them we trust especially in the case of Religion and consciēce as that many times we suffer our selus to be led against our own perswasiōs by a reuerence we beare to other mens opiniōs Seuenthly And this no doubt was the cause why the Queene was so resolued in in her bloodie persecutions shee giuing credit to their perswasion whom shee reputed most Reuerend and Learned and they perswading her she could not discharge the office of her Soueraigne place nor defend the Catholike Faith but by the extirping the Protestant Religion which in their opinion was Heresie in the highest degree neither could shee as they thought suppresse the generall fauour that profession had got in generall estimation but by seuerity rigorous laws wherein they were farre deceiued For it is impossible that any Pollicie of man should be able to supplant Gods Husbandrie which he hath made prosperous the Truth whereof is manifest in the experience of these persecuting times when as the death of one holy man was the life of many God raising a holy generation out of the ashes of his holy Martyrs the Church not decresing but increasing by the stroake of persecution And in this case was the Queene counselled as Rehoboams was by his young states men to make the yoake of persecution heauie whereas her Father did chastise with rodds she should correct with scourges and this was the euill counsell wherewith the Queene was ordered for shee made her yoake heauier than all her Predecessors had done and in truth insupportable for any true Christian Professor Eightly And therefore this Counsell of theirs may haue Pollicie but no Piety for if the State in King Edwards time had vsed Gardiner and Bonner with like seuerity and had taken from them their euill liues which they had iustly forfeited then had not these euill Ministers bene the cause of so much blood shed neither happily should the Queene haue had any such as they to haue prouoked her to such dishonour and vngodly practise for it is needfull Pollicie that the haughty spirits of men that haue authority and greatnesse must either not be offended or being moued to offence must bee then made sure from taking Reuenge And it had bene good for the Christian State that the ambitious spirit of Winchester had either not bene discontented by his disgrace and imprisonment or being so offended to haue made him sure from reuengefull practise and if this had thus come to passe no doubt much Christian blood had bene saued which by his meanes perished Neither had the Queene come into that ignominy of blood and cruelty shee being in her own Nature rather inclined to pittie and mercifull respect then otherwise And therefore though the time of Queene Maries gouernement was the most bloodie persecution that euer was in this Land I thinke euer since it had a Christian Prince yet was this Ladie otherwise disposed in her owne Nature neither would shee haue made her name so monstrous in blood had not her conscience perswaded a necessity shee being so resolued by their perswasion who shee thought had authority to iudge her Obseruations Diuine Pollitique Morall FIRST Diuinity doth admit no distinction of men but the difference of good and bad for Gods fauour doth not look as mans doth men iudge by externall but God by internall euidence God is no accepter of persons but men accept nothing but the persons of men and therfore it is often seene that thus God and the world diuide their seueralls God markes his with Grace the world hers with Nature and Fortune Secondly It is a pollicie of long practise and large proofe that Priests Iesuites and men of spirituall function are appointed for State designes as the most pregnant and conuenient m●n for they haue this odds that besides their helps of learning and much experience they haue alwaies the reuerence of their profession which vndoubtedly with people of their owne faith doth gaine them and their perswasions extraordinary credit Thirdly It is a prouidence worthy of
regarded the dignity of her temporall life more than the honour and dignity of her Christian Name But she that could not be ouercome with euill ouercame this euill temptation and resisted the power thereof by her vertue and godly constancie Eighthly Againe the Q in thus altering the State of Religion did attempt a matter very difficult and of no easie performance and this she might vnderstand by her iudgemēt in Philosophie by obseruing the course of all naturall things For we see that those things which moue themselues in their naturall motiō are carried with lesse vehemēce then those that are moued by violent forced meanes And the body of this kingdome at that time of the Q. entering the state mouing in the fauour of romish religion wherin it had formerly moued for many yeares could not without much violence and great difficultie be moued against that customary motion nor be forced to retire backe in the same steps wherein it had formerly proceeded and therfore this difficulty in finishing was a consideration of state which in respect of state might haue diswaded the Q. holy care from the reforming of religion which would haue preuailed with any prince in the world who had regarded the felicity of their temporal life more than the honour of God or the prosperity of the Catholike Church Ninthly the discontentment of her neighbour nations the displeasure of the greatest part of Christian princes was a speciall consideration and such as that nothing but grace could be able to withstand for it is necessarie natural in the Natures of Princes in the spirits of great persons to desire generall reputation and that their names may liue in the fauour of good estimation hating to be held hatefull or not to haue place in the loue of their neighbour nations For this forreigne regard as it exceedingly cotenteth the noble spirits of such as desire it so also it is most behoofull for the security of their persons states kingdomes and great states being in this respect like particular men not able to liue in prosperity and flourishing wealth without cōmunicating to each other their seueral profits neither is there any part in the world where the regard of cōfederacy forraigne cōbination is so behoofull as in the states of christendome because of the equall partage of christendome to many seuerall princes whereby they liue in iealousie of one another cōmonly confederate with such forreigne power as in the discretion of state is thought to be of most conueniency both to aduance the glory of their nation to aduantage them against their most feared enemies wheras it is otherwise in the spatious gouernement of mighty Empires such as at this day the Turke the Persian and the Russian Emperours be and such as heretofore the Romane Emperours were who by reason of their huge bodies of State moue almost without resistance neither care these mighty Emperours so much to confederate with their Neighbours because they know that of necessity those lesser states must like Riuers discharge their seruice into their Ocean But this Kingdome of England being in the middest of many disagreeing Nations This consideration of state did therfore neerely concerne the Queene to consider of and these importances would doubtlesse haue diswaded her holy cares had her cares bene any other than holy Tenthly But this Noble Defendresse of the Faith howsoeuer shee vnderstood as much in the wisdome of State as anie other Prince than liuing Yet would she not be ruled by that wisdome but like her selfe a most Christian Princesse shee contradicts Pollicie with Pietie And she whose Religious Iudgement might and could teach her that God was able to support her Princely State against all opposition and to supply to al her necessities would not for any State consideration distrust the mighty power of his prouidence or forsake the safetie of his protection for any cause whatsoeuer For shee knew well that God was altogether as able to preuaile with the lesse as with the greater number and that he was not like man to worke onely by the aduantage of meanes for without meanes can he effect whatsoeuer shall please him were the whole power of earth and hel to withstand him And therfore as Sampson strong in God could with his weake weapon destroy a Thousand of his enemies so this most resolute Defendresse of the Faith refusing the power of earth hath with the truth of Religion onely vanquished not a thousand onely but many thousands of Gods enemies whereby she hath most nobly garded the safe passage of the Catholike Faith Eleuenthly And this I report in honour of this most excellent Queene whom no respect of danger or State consideration could remoue from her holy constancie whom all the power of the earth was not able to bereaue of her noble spirit whereby shee was most excellent fit for the defence of Faith and wherewith she hath defended it with as much honourable merit as euer any Christian Prince in the world did Obseruations Diuine Pollitique Morall FIRST God doth then trie the faith and loue of his seruants when they are presented with strong and able temptations for these tryalls though they cannot confirme in God any opinion of Truth in whom there is all knowledge yet they serue for the imitation of other and for their iudgement that will not imitate Secondly He that shall fall from the seruice of God for any respect whatsoeuer doth iudge himselfe an Apostate and vnworthy of Gods fauour because euen those that loue God if they loue him for respect they loue the respect and not God Thirdly In state reason it may seeme hazardous for the Queene to alter the State of Religion because it might haue occasioned such discords in the State as might much distresse her peaceable beginnings being yet vnsetled yet considering in what termes the State then stood the Faction being almost indifferent in number and strength she might very well thinke that the authority of her opinion would carrie many thousands with it because the grosse multitude doth euer moue in the current of the common opinion Fourthly In the proceedings of State affaires the prosecutions must be ordered by a discreet and setled iudgement and not with desperate vndertakings which some call Man-hood and heroicall spirit For if there be difference betweene a priuate man and an ordinarie officer in the State there must also be difference betweene the particular cause and the generall State Fifthly It is the strength of a Pollitique State to haue assured confederacie combination with neighbour Nations but the wisedome of that state is in nothing more iustified than in the profitable vse of such confederacie for therein doth appeare the excellence of wit when with the onely charge of wit we can imploy another mans power to our owne purposes Sixthly To resist and vanquish the
in retyring himselfe from the Popes seruice for at that time were all Christian Princes his seruants This Act of the kings was that which many Emperors and great Potentates desired might be done yet neuer durst attempt to doe or succesfully attempted it Such as was the Emperour Frederick Barbarossa who notwithstanding his greatnesse both of power and spirit yet failed he in his attempt though he neuer pursued any thing with greater stomack Also King Henry the Second of England who fayling in the fortunes of this businesse yeelded himselfe though valiant and princely to such base conditions of pennance as well may declare the greatnesse of the Pope that imposed them but with this King Henry the Eight it may seeme that God himselfe did conspire to make the worke prosperous and the king for being Gods instrument perpetually famous Secondly The first occasion of difference betweene King Henry and the Pope was the proceedings in the diuorse of Queene Katherine the kings first wife who before had bene wife to Prince Arthur his Brother wherein the Pope vsed such small regard to quiet the trouble of the kings Conscience as thereby the king and the State were very much offended and then such as did not fauour the faction of the Pope for so I may call it tooke the aduantage of time and grew bold to lay open to the king the deformities of the present time and the glory hee might purchase in restoring Religion to that purity which now in that holy profession was altogether defaced Thirdly Those occasions so moue the kings offence that hee sommons his High Court of Parlyament at Westminster laying before them his griefe which was the ouermuch power the Pope had in his kingdome and the small respect that hee and his State had from the Pope whereupon a Statute past by consent of the three estates whereby the king was made supreme Head ouer the Church of England aswell in ecclesiasticall as temporal matters cutting off al manner of Papal authority from the crowne of England And herein may appeare the greatnes of the king and the reuerence of his Subiects who framed themselues to the pleasure of the king in a matter of much difficultie and beyond all expectation And this was the benefit of Maiesty which begot in them such duty and awfull regard which to a remisse and familiar Prince had not beene granted Fourthly This grant of the kings Supremacie was the first mortall wound the Church of Rome receiued loosing at that time the best Crowne shee had in keeping whereby a president was giuen to all other Christian Princes to free themselues from the Captiuity of that Babylon with whose Fornications the whole Earth was made drunke And this Act of the State of England was so well approued in the Iudgement of Christendome as that many the best parts thereof in immitation of King Henry haue cast from them the bond of Papall authority yea doubtlesse so desired it is of all States as might it bee done with security their is no Prince or State either Religious or politique but doth so enuie the greatnesse of forraigne Supremacie as gladly they would bee cleered thereof finding many times to the great detriment of state the iniury of this power in interdictions and Papall curses as if wee reade the diuisions of Italy we may in them most cleerely iudge the inconuenience of the Popes vniuersall power the abuse whereof is so common in those states as that they are neuer obeyed but when there wanteth temporall power to withstand them And therefore did King Henry nobly performe his kingly Office and well defend the Catholike Faith in depriuing the Pope of that power wherewith the Christian Faith was offended Obseruations Diuine Pollitique Morall FIRST God doth what he list by what meanes he list so doth hee produce his miracles by causes naturally vnfitting and so this miraculous alteration in the state of Christendome was effected by the king his instrument who both in Nature and opinion was thought vnlike for such Religious effects being rather armed both by the Pope and Luther to oppose the enterprize So doth God snare the engine maker For the Wisedome of this World is but folly with God Secondly To obserue a iust proportion of state is good in all degrees but in a Soueraigne necessary yet hee that exceeds his state doth impaire his state and by taking more then his owne he doth loose his own CHAP. IV. Of what importance this Act for the Kings Supremacy was to the state of England in respect of Piety and Pollicy FIRST If we consider the trauells of men on earth and the continuall passage of all their actions we shall finde that euery particular man of Spirit or that hath but more then common vnderstanding directeth himselfe and his whole trauell to one of these two ends eyther to be Good or to be Great and according to his choice of these hee doth frame the practise of his life as if to goodnesse then is his care good and hee doth exercise those good meanes that may leade him to his good end For there is no way to attaine good end but by good meanes But he that aymeth at greatnesse the care of his life is much different for to him there is no direct way of lawfulnesse or honestie to runne in for he breaketh these limits and trauells in euery by passage how vnlawfullsoeuer and therefore they of this nature allow onely of this one principall that whatsoeuer may direct them to their end be it sinne or shame they giue it allowance Such was the resolution of that Tyrant who making Empire his desired end cared not to trauell thither in the steppes of his neerest blood so deepe as perhaps to damne himselfe And like vnto him are all such whose desires leade them to vnlawfull ends who resoluing to obtaine their desires resolue likewise vpon the practise of all vngodlinesse Secondly And this practise of euill men is in common construction called Pollicie whereby the name of Pollicie doth receiue much wrong by their grosse and sencelesse vnderstanding it for Pollicie may bee either good or bad according to the end whereto out of these considerations First the liberty that was recouered in the person of the Prince he resuming that absolute authority to himselfe which before was giuen to a stranger his enemy whereby the King did adde to his owne greatnesse and diminish the power of him that loued him not And how important this is to the prosperity of a State let the Iudgement of any sence iudge it Againe there is no State or Kingdome vnder the awe of Popish Supremacie that can be said truly to be a free State or the King thereof an absolute Prince because that Kingdome is subiugate and that King Subordinate to the power of another whereby the gouernement Monarchiall which of all others is most excellent cannot bee said to bee in
them being by both their enemies interdict and deposed from their gouernements but yet with vnequall successe For Pope Alexander did curse more effectually and to better purpose then Pope Clement The Emperour being constrained by his interdictions and bannings to surcease his forward Armes and with great humility to reconcile and submit himselfe But King Henries Pope was not so happie in his curses For hee did banne and curse the King as much as any other Pope in the world could doe yet was it fruitlesse and to no purpose the King not thriuing worse but the better for this bitter banning Shemei who like Balam the banning Prophet offer sacrifice to curse with holy pretence and for good prosperity Fourthly Lastly in their ends were they most vnlike for the Emperour was continually followed with euil fortune being forced many times to many great extremities and many dishonourable fallings First was hee disarmed by the power of the Popes Censure his owne people forsaking him in his best hope and in a time of most importance then was hee constrained by ineuitable necessity to submit himselfe to the Pope and to implore his fauour and either to receiue the Crowne and the dignity of his place at the curtesie of his enemie or else to bee depriued of all soueraigne State Againe the indignities wherewith the Pope did vse the Emperor to whom when the Emperour made his humble submission the Pope in scorne of his debased Maiesty set his foot on the Emperours neck with his misapplyed phrase of Scripture Super Aspidem c. the which how grieuous it must needs bee to a person of such Maiesty and spirit let any man that hath spirit iudge it Lastly his end was vnfortunate the naturall course of his life being preuented by violent and sudden death But the Kings fortunes were for the most part prosperous and much vnequall to the Emperor for he did not only shunne these dangerous fortunes but most brauely acquitted himself of all dishonourable retiring finishing whatsoeuer hee attempted with such ease and prosperity as if no resistance had bene made against him In respect then of themselues and of their noble and haughty spirits were these Princes of most equall and fit comparison in respect also of their attempts they did both conspire one But in their fortunes they were much disagreeing The King finishing that with victory and successe wherein the Emperour euer failed And yet this praise may be giuen the Emperour that if the Kings fortunes had bene giuen him it is most certaine hee would haue vsed them to greater aduantage the king being satisfied with that title which could not haue satisfied the great ambition of the Emperour OF THE NEXT DEFENDOR OF THE Faith King EDVVARD the Sixth CHAP. XI FIRST there is nothing good that is not deriued from God the fountaine of all goodnesse for man and all the passage of his life from his birth to his buriall is altogether euill so generally is deprauednesse spread ouer all the sonnes of Nature that there was neuer any Iesus Christ excepted from the first man Adam to him that shall be the last borne free from the infection of sinne so generally is that leprosie spread ouer all mankinde as that no part of the body or any faculty of the soule is altogether free from the euil thereof euery man being by nature inclinable to euery sinne no man hauing power to doe well for grace is the gift of God neither can any man attaine it but he to whom it shall please God to giue it And therefore when God hath a work of grace to be wrought by men he giueth to such whom he shall choose for instruments so much of his good spirit as to inable them for his holy purpose So that God both decreeth the good and deuiseth the meanes to compasse it Man being passiue and moued to goodnesse as shall please the spirit of God to leade him And therefore the glorie of euery good action belongeth to God onely by whose spirit it is onely wrought and not otherwise Secondly And for particular instance of this wee haue King Edward to consider a Prince composed all of goodnesse hauing extraordinarie induments of holinesse so abundant was Gods grace in this Prince as thereby he was well fitted to finish the worke of Reformation yet wee may not giue the honour of the businesse to the King but to God who inspired him with this abundance of grace And thus farre onely wee honor the King as Gods instrument whereby it did please him to worke and that we admire the gifts of Gods spirit in him whereby hee was made to exceede all other Princes then liuing hauing receiued from God the sword of the spirit and the Shield of Faith whereby hee was well able to defend the Catholike Faith and to retorte all the fierie darts of the Diuell And therefore the greatest glory be to God who hath the greatest part in this businesse and let the King haue honour too whom God did please to honour as his choice instrument Thirdly Such was this most noble Prince and princely Defendor King Edward as the King his Father may be said to haue defended the Catholike Faith in nothing more then in leauing the succession of his cares to such a sonne such a Prince and such a Defendor who notwithstanding his youth and the many combrances of State at that time went forward in reforming with such spirit and successe as was admirable his zeale effecting that his Fathers coldnesse had left vndone So that God may seeme to haue loued him as he did Moses giuing so much of his spirit as sufficiently would suffice many others For let him be compared with all other Princes in the world then liuing and he shall bee found in true iudgement to exceed them all hauing dedicate himselfe wholly to the faithfull executing of Gods will manifesting his holy affections by his continuall cares to that end directed And therefore happie was K. Henrie and happie was this Nation in hauing this Sonne of Grace to second him and to perfect his religious cares whom God had found like holy Dauid answerable to his owne heart whose honourable name liueth with those names of most honour whose faithfull seruice to God and Religion doth now flourish in many parts of Christēdome and whose soule liues in the fauour of God and in the happie fellowship of holy Angels and Saints Fourthly This most gratious and excellent Prince as he was deriued the Defendor of the Faith and did by naturall discent inherit his fathers titles so as his neerest and principall care did he entertaine the cause and like as he was Gods Lieftenant hee did maintaine those spirituall warres his Father had vndertaken and did proceed with such spirit and successe as all those quarrells haue that haue Christ Iesus for their generall and Antichrist for an enemie
God they had lawfully gotten And therefore the honourable compounding of these differences doth conclude the wisedome and faithfull seruice of such as then did gouerne the state For if the Duke had bene ambitious and had aspired the soueraigntie he would neuer haue lost the aduantage of this occasion the time then seruing best to haue attempted it the body of the Rebellious wanting onely such a head to haue led them to any desperate attempt whatsoeuer And therefore howsoeuer his enemies did brand his name with dishonourable imputations it is very vnlikely the Duke should haue any such disloyall affections neglecting as I haue said these opportune occasions and being so strong in the fauour of the people Fourthly But that which did most discontent the King and threaten the state was the variance betweene the Lord Protector and the Barrons whose high place and honourable deseruing had got him much dangerous enuie in the State which hee by too much sufferance gaue aduantage to preuaile so farre as to his owne destruction For if the Duke by his authority had cut off the first beginnings of this euill he had preuented the mischiefe which thereof insued and so he might haue done that in the opportunity of time with ease which afterwards hee would most gladly haue done but could not with all the authority he had compasse because the opportunity was past and then he could not recall occasions which then flie from vs when they are not intertained For it be hooueth him of great place that would preuent the danger of enuie not to forbeare the cause of enuie which is goodnes but to destroy the first beginnings of enuie not to giue that euill weed sufferance which in short time will grow to a strength vncontroleable and then who so offers to strike shall but wound himselfe and like a bird in a trap locke himselfe more strongly in by striuing to escape And this assuredly was the Dukes error to suffer his enemies to grow to a strength he could not command and then being in their danger he sought by strong hand to rid himselfe wherein he found he was much deceiued to the losse of his life and to the glory of his enemies now from what cause this discord had beginning is diuersly imagined neither doth our English Chronicles determine it so that many seuerall coniectures diuersly interpret it some blame the Dukes improuidence and that he did not regard his owne security so much as the danger of his place required and therefore suffered his enemies to practise against him with all aduantage Others that his euill gouerning the State did so offend the Lords as in their honourable care of the State they sought redresse and that the Duke might either surrender his authority or else reforme the disordered course of his former proceedings to the more honour of the King and the better gouernement of the Common-Wealth others thinke that hee aspired the principality and thereby runne himselfe into the highest degree of treason which opinion is all malice and no Truth For questionlesse if the Duke had bene guilty of Treason his enemies would neuer haue condemned him of Felonie Lastly it is thought the cause was nothing but a practise of enuie which his honourable life and zealous care for Religion had procured him who aduancing his indeauour with all constancie for the reforming of Religion and trauelling in the state with much prosperity and honour hee by these meanes got a double enemie his religious care procured him the hatred of the discontented persons in the State which then were many and his honourable life got him enuie in the great ones who then couet to suppresse the growing reputation of any whose merit may challenge the highest degrees of honour for men enuie not the euill but the good of others and he alwaies is most subiect to be enuied whose vertuous life shall least deserue it Sixthly And from this cause was the vnfortunate end of the good Duke the Lord Protector whom his enemies did not destroy for his euill but for his honourable and vertuous life And this howsoeuer it had the course of orderly proceeding according to the tryall of law yet was that onely a colour to giue it some reasonable pretence whereby the common mouth of the vulgar might be stopped which in such cases is most daring and prodigall and surely it is very remarkeable that a Prince of his authority and greatnesse Vnkle to the King and protector of his person and state should bee thus forced to these hard extremities and that in a Kingdome which himselfe did protect to be arrested condemned and executed for Felonie and example so rare as no time can produce the like and such as may remember the greatest how subiect they be to the fall of Fortune who foyleth them most that fall from the highest dignities Obseruations Diuine Pollitique Morall FIRST God doth often suffer his owne cause Religion euen in the hope and prosperity thereof to indure contrary fortunes sometimes by intrusion of Errors often by the interruption of peace For without these tryalls of opposition and aduersity there can be no distinction of good and bad neither could it merit extraordinarie praise to be a Christian. Secondly In the Iudgement of Diuinity it doth not destroy the Truth of any cause to suffer iniurie and violence because the most sacred Sonne of God did indure them in their extremities Therefore are they deceiued that make temporall prosperity a note of spirituall Truth because Truth in this life may liue in banishment Thirdly It was a wicked policie in the kings enemies but powerfull to sow Discord in his neerest blood for by that meanes it was easie for them to gaine that which otherwise had bene difficult because such disagreements are most implacable that haue had power to destroy naturall affections for there is no hate like that which is translated out of loue Fourthly It is one of the most principall respects that should be in a Prince to be able to conteine his owne secrets and in all his important affaires to vnderstand more than he shall discouer for by this meanes hee shall both delude the purpose of him that would deceiue him and by Pollitique obseruations discouer designes farre off Fifthly Particular disquiets in a Morall life are ciuill warres that would destroy a blessed peace for as euery man is a little world So the order or disorder of that world hath resemblance and fit comparison with the state of this world CHAP. XV. A Discourse of the miseries of mans life vpon occasion of the Duke of Somersets death FIRST It is true that at our birth wee begin to die our life being no better then a continuall sicknesse which by many extremities leade vs to our graue the sanctuarie and house of Rest and therefore the best men haue least desired
it and the holiest dispised it and that which doth stay them from the fruition of eternall happinesse and tie them to the bondage of flesh which of all other prisons is most slauish especially to a soule of diuine and heauenly contemplation For the holy men of all ages haue neuer thought it burden some to die but haue desired death to release them from the miseries of life neither haue they feared the Image of death when it hath bene presented in the most dreadfull forme that Tyrants and wicked men could deuise because such men make their life but seruant to their death desiring onely to liue to the glorie of their God that so they may die in his fauour for such death setteth open the gates of eternity whereas euery houre of this our transitory life is subiect to many deaths and many hard extremities Secondly The experience of this is common and therefore lesse admirable neither is it strange that Christian men should dispise transitorie life and the vaine glory of flesh because they are bound thereto by the dutie of Christianity Christ himselfe the examples of Christians both commanding and commending it And therefore is this obedienc● most worthie in the Children of Grace but most strange in the sonnes of Nature such as haue onely a generall vnderstanding of God and of his mighty power not knowing him in his mercie nor in the hope of saluation who by the naturall iudgement of sence could iudge the miseries of mans life and therefore would preferre death before a life so vnconstant and variable Such were the noble spirits of many worthy men in former ages and such were many of those graue and learned Philosophers who contemned the vaine glorie of mans life and triumphed in the hope of death being their comfort and that wich in their opinion would conclude their infinite trauell and secure them in the pleasure of perpetuall rest And such were they who vnderstanding the immortality of the soule and how the faculties thereof were letted in their diuine offices by the indisposition of their bodies and the naturall pronenesse thereof to aduersity and euill would by violent death haue freed their soules from the prison of their flesh The which howsoeuer it was by the rule of Religion both damnable and foolish yet they not knowing Religion nor the duty of conscience gaue a notable demonstration how much they esteemed death more than a life so full of misery and change Thirdly Such is the miserable condition of mans life as that euery minute thereof is subiect to euill change no man hauing power to resist the infinite number of occasions that daily threaten him insomuch as if God withdraw his prouidence and leaue vs to our guidance we are then the most miserable of all others hauing more to afflict vs than all the other creatures of God because by our offending the Lord of all wee haue made both him and them our enemies So that all occasions and euery worke of nature watch the aduantage of Gods sufferance to reuenge themselues on man for whose sinne they haue indured the curse of euill And from hence doth issue the infinite number of grieuances which continually threaten the prosperity of mans life whereby the most pleasurable time of mans life is subiect to this great misery that hee cannot secure any little continuance of those pleasures wherin he so delighteth neither can hee preuent the sorrowes of his life nor rid himselfe from the least of them neither can he as he is naturall with any patience beare them So that both with them and without them he is most miserable and so for euer would be if the mercie of God did not supplie to this weakenesse and euill condition of our Nature Fourthly Now to relate some particulars of these infinite miseries I first begin with sicknesse an infirmity that beginneth with our life and endeth in our graue which God hath ordained to subdue the pride of mans nature least being puft vp with too much prosperity we should forget that wee are mortall and but creatures And this in a double respect is very grieuous to our Natures first in respect of the diuersity of sicknesses which being infinite in number seeme like so many enemies to threaten our tranquillity and quiet Secondly in respect of our selues all men being at all times subiect to all infirmities And therefore they that haue heaped the glory and treasure of this worlde and seeme to ingrosse the pleasures of this life are notwithstanding arrested by sicknesse and that many times with such violence as they earnestly desire death to release them of the miseries of life neither is the basest condition of men exempt from this generall infirmitie the rich the poore the base and the Noble being in this respect equalls all men being alike seruants to the sorrow of sicknesse whose generall power preuailes to the destruction of all flesh Fifthly Another maine grieuance is pouerty of life which doth depresse the spirits of many which otherwise would rise to those deseruings which in the iudgement of the world are most honourable And this is both in it selfe euill and a punishment for sinne also in generall opinion it is most hatefull and that which almost all men carefully shunne because in the reputation of the world men are estimated not according to their being what they are but after their hauing how much they are in the fauour of fortune And such men are onely esteemed honourable and best worthy who are most worth in vaine and vile possessions the better sort of men commonly enioying the least part of those earthly blessings which God hath giuen his creatures by which vneuen distribution it commeth to passe that many times the honourable man hath the vilde place and the vilde man the honourable the seruant many times exceeding his Lord in the true worth of honesty and vertue by whom he is exceeded in vaine glory and honour And this must needs be a great deiection to such as haue spirit to vnderstand themselues for when men liue in a disproportion to their worth it exceedingly blunteth that alacrity and good spirit which in a better condition of fortune would be gracefull And surely it cannot but grieue the spirit of vnderstanding men to see the blockish and most vnworthie like idols with ornaments and trappings to be inuested with dignities and high preferments that onely know to vse those dignities to their couetous profit and not to any honourable deseruing And though pouerty to a good man be but like the foyle to a diamond to make it appeare the more beautifull yet generally to mankinde it is most hatefull and that which is onely indured by necessity and Christian patience begetting many times most dangerous discontentments in them of best apprehension and obscuring the gifts of God and nature which otherwise
who so soone as euer he could moue was moued by the Spirit of grace to holy and good purposes The best proofe of this was his Princely care for Religion wherin at all times he approued himselfe both industrious and resolute and wherein he fortunately trauelled with much prosperity and honour The demonstration whereof is now visible in the face of Scotland that kingdome being by his Maiesties happy gouernment reduced to the first Christian Faith and to a better forme of Common-wealth than formerly it had The Church there being reformed and purged from popish Idolatrie which had profaned both that and all other Christian Kingdomes Secondly and in this the King deserued euerlasting memory and praise that he was the first Christian King in that Kingdome whose care gaue end to that miserie and by whom that Church had the truth of the Catholike Faith practised publikely and with the warrant of lawfull authority professed In which holy businesse the King was verie fortunate and for which God did make him fortunate in the passage of his Princely life assisting him in his lawfull attempts and confounding the wicked practises of bad men who banded against his Maiestie to destroy him And therefore before his Maiestie had the title of Defendor of the Catholike Faith did he faithfully defend it and aduised and enioyned his Princely Sonne Prince Henrie to defend it And thus did God prepare the Kings Maiestie and the Prince for the purpose of this holy businesse and by exercising them for the defence of Faith in the kingdome of Scotland to fit them for the like care in England wherein the King most gratiously begunne his gouernment and ended it and wherein we trust that his Sonne our gratious Souereigne that now is and his royall seed for euer shall in these kingdomes defend the most true most antient and most Catholike Faith Obseruations Diuine Pollitique Morall FIRST it is in vaine to indeauour things wherein God is opposite for no power can alter the purpose of his prouidence This hath instance in the Fortunes of these two kingdomes England and Scotland who haue euer laboured their seueral extremities to be vnited the which when Pollitie and the wisedome of State could not doe God without these meanes gaue it successe and in an instant bound these disagreeing nations in the bonds of vnseparable concord Secondly the King by publishing in print his opinion of Religion and his directions for Christian gouernement did thereby much confirme the hopes and hearts of the better part of our English people For it must needs be that if the contrarie faction the Papist did not withstanding this declaration of his Maiesties presume much vpon fauour at his entrance this presumption would in all likely-hood haue proued a practise and therefore was this Publike satisfaction a Religious pollicie that did both arme his friends and disarme his enemies Thirdly It is necessary many times to a mans Morrall reputation to maintaine his integrity by Apollogies and publike protestations For if the person be eminent and of publike Note his good or euill name will be likewise generall CHAP. XXXIIII In what particulers King IAMES our Souereigne that was principally defended the Faith FIRST It is often true that the alteration of the Prince is a cause that the State is likewise altered and that those things which formerly in the gouernement had great authority become not only neglected but also punishable and in great contempt And this though it bee not true in generall instance yet in euery change of a Prince it is either hoped of the bad or feared of the better sort of people Wee had particuler witnesse of that in our happie alteration happie because nothing but the very person of the Prince was altered the gouernement remained in like degrees of happines wherein Queene Elizabeth to her honourable renowne nowne left it yet then were there many euill and discontented persons who could hopefully perswade themselues that the opportunity was then offered which they expected and that the time serued to reintegrate them into fauour and to bring their cause vnder the safetie of the kings protection And though in respect of the Kings particuler there was little or no ground for any such hope his Maiestie hauing before hand declared himselfe in print how in the case of Religion he was resolued yet was there a generall hope in that contrarie faction whereby they imagined somewhat would be done if not to their absolute content yet to their great ease and to the lightning the burthen of their afflictions which in the Queenes time they worthily indured Secondly But that which is more strange and worthie of note that not onely the Papists had this hopefull imagination but their opposites also whom men commonly call Puritans had the like conceiuing they hoping their cause should finde such large allowance of fauour with the King that they and their opinion onely should haue the countenance and warrant of the Kings protection And that both the Papist and the regular Protestant should be iudged vnusefull and of necessity to bee excluded from the Catholike Church Thirdly And howsoeuer the successe of this came short of common expectation yet was this of much more likelihood then the other both because their controuersie was not for the matter of Religion but for order and for the manner of Ceremonie and circumstance onely and also because the gouernment of the Church of Scotland had neere resemblance with that which they desired whereby the King might the better or rather be induced to giue them and their request friendly intertainment Yet notwithstanding al these likelihoods and the hopes of either partie did the King incline to neither his Maiestie finding the Church of England as it was established to be the meane and vertue betweene these two extremities and that their desires were not for the peace and aduancement of the Catholike Faith according as both of them pretended and that these oppositions were either to be reconciled and so made friends or else opposed as enemies Fourthly And this may worthily seeme strange that these two irreconcileable opinions that of the Papist and this of the Puritane should both of them at one time expect supportation from one and the same Prince and from such a Prince as had before declared himselfe not to fauour them that these who neuer consent in any little resemblance should thus conspire and hope in one particular person And the reason was the seuerall perswations they had of the truth of their cause wherein the maintainers of both opinions could receiue speciall satisfaction in themselues and hopefully belieue to worke the King to that acknowledgement of truth wherein they themselues were resolued and wherein they thought was sufficient reason to satisfie or perswade any man Besides they might peraduenture frame speciall arguments of hope to giue them incouragement in hopefull
These banning Pope● like Shemei and Balam The Princes agree not in their ends The Emperors bad fortunes The indignities wherewith the Pope did vse the Emperor The Popes insulting pride The Emperors end vnfortunate The King very fortunate In respect of themselues the two Princes were equalls in respect of their fortunes they disagree The Emperours praise God the foūtaine of goodnesse All men naturally euill Grace the gift of God God decreeth the good and deuiseth the meanes K. Edward K. Edward fit to finish the worke of Reformation God had the greatest part in this businesse The King beloued of God The King the best of all Christian Princes then liuing The Nation happie in K. Edward to defend the Faith The praise of King Edward The miserie of manie kingdomes Alexander of Macedon Alexander leauing his Empire to his friend diuided did sooner perish The kingdomes of France Edward the Third The title of England to the crowne of France Frāce much vexed with English warres France still in the hazard of English warres English examples Yorke and Lancaster The cause of the E●glish ciuill warres was the interrupting of lawfull Succession Queene Elizabeth The danger that was feared by her want of Issue The danger of the State Gods preuention The euent did exceed expectation The subuersion of great houses The Sonnes of gouernors are best fitted for gouernement King Edward did exceed and succeed his Father Diuine Pollitique Morall The Kings praise His mercy to his enemies The particular of his deserts The King did inherit his kingdome and h●● care for Religion together His first care He secondeth his Fathers attempt His first act of defence to the Faith King Edward was not tempted as was King Henry by euill counsell His holy zeale for reformation The King well fitted for this businesse The King not moued by any respect Wherein K. Edward principally defended the Faith Popery vtterly extirped by the King The consent of Parliament An vniforme order of common prayer appointed by the King Verity could not stand without vnitie Iosias of Iuda The ceremonies of Poperie like the rites of the Heathen Priests Anno 1547. The repeale of statutes concerning Religion Sixe Articles Gardiner Bonner The Kings renowne The King put out the fires of persecution The King did cure the wound his Father made The Kings furtherance The orders of the Church ●stablish●d by the King The King most mercifull and compassionate In mercie men resemble God His care for poore Hospitalls by him erected The workes of mercie the best witnesses of holy Faith The King deserued his Stile Diuine Pollitique Morall Contraries iudge one another Note There must be faction Prouidence The reason of this opposition of good and euill Goodnesse not confounded but confirmed by the opposition of euill The way is good if the end be happy Truth Euill men and euill practise against the King Scotland The Marriage with Q. Mary of Scotland The importance of that Marriage King Iames our Soueraigne The King euer victor Rebelliō moued by perswasion and not by any proper motiō The Papists The practise of reb●l●ious Iesuits and Priests The Duke of Somerset Protector His deserts The reforming of Religion diuided the kingdome into a faction The Dukes care to compound these differences The Duke slandered The variance between the Lord Protector the Barrons Honour and desert beget dangerous enuie The Dukes error in pollicie Post est occasio Calua Note This ouersight was his death The cause of this discord The Dukes improuidēce His euill gouernement of the State Ambition This opinion is all malice no truth The true cause was a practise of enuie A double enemie The nature of great and enuious spirits Vertue most subiect to enuie The tryall of law on●ly a colour to satisfie reports The Dukes extremitie of hard fortune The greatest are most subiect to the fall of Fortune Diuine Pollitique Morall Life is a sicknesse The contempt of life Holy men neuer feared the Image of death Holy death setteth open the gates of life The Childrē of Grace The sonnes of nature The iudgement of sense can iudge miserie of mans life The antient Romanes and Greciās Against the rule of Religion A notable demonstratiō Man hath more to afflict him than all other Creatures Because of sinne The cause of the many grieuances of mans life Sickenesse Sickenesse ordained to subdue the pride of our nature A double respect First the number of sicknesses Secondly the generality All men being subiect at all times to all infirmities Rich men The poore the rich are both alike ●fflicted with sicknesse Pouertie of life Pouertie hatefull to men The false opinion of the world The honourable and the vile man do o●cupi● on the others place Want d●iecteth the spirits of well deseruing men The griefe of noble spirits Pouertie to a good man is like the foyle to the Diamond The desperate effects of pouertie Mutability and change The continuall trouble of mans life The graue the resting place 〈…〉 Custome is another nature Men by their naturall motions moue to euill but to goodnesse by the mouing of Grace That Roman Conquerour The Duke of Somerset A custome among the antient Romanes Variable fortune maketh men miserable Discontent Minde Discontent a dangerous disease The danger in discontenting great spirits All men haue at some times their discontents Holy men haue bene discontented Griefe is a greater torment then sickenesse The greatnesse of Discontent Death Death an enemie against whom there is no resistance Death doth controule the prosperities of our life Death is not a misery to all men Death maketh holy men immortall Good men hope for death and bad men feare it Death and the graue make all things equall No man hath pleasures but with limitation To good men there is no miserie How to vse the pleasures of this life Who are happie No man can know any part of Gods secrets vnles God reueals them God not contrarie but aboue reason The cause of false constructions In diuine matters Christians must belieue when they cannot iudge The vse that God can make of all our actions K. Edward The wonderfull effects of Gods prouidence The blood of the Martyrs was the seed of the Gospell The deaths of a few was the life of many God is mercifull in his iudgements The Kings death Great occasions of trouble in the kingdome The nobility comm●ns disagree in the choice of their Prince King Edward euill counselled Northumberland Suffolke the cause of this great iniurie Reasons why the King did it not of his owne motion but by perswasion A doubtfull question resolued Good ends cannot be compassed by euill meanes God is the Father of truth What good men must do Diuine Pollitique Morall Iosias of Iuda and Edward of England Their age when they began their Reigne Both of these Kings conspiring one holy end Both their Kingdomes were corrupted with idolatrie Both of them yeeld their obed●ence to holy perswasion effect their purpose Both these