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

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bold reprover of Kings he became a shameless flatterer of Popes for he is said to have first moved the decree in Gratian. dist 40. cap. Si quis if a Pope carry with him innumerable souls into Hell no man ought to say unto him What doest thou He spoke so and afterwards the Popes did aim at exemption from censure untill they did attain it he had from Rome a power Legantine in Germany neither preached he only unto the Heathens but did corrupt several Provinces where Christ had been preached as Thuringia Argentina c. with Roman Manicheism condemning some meats forbidding marriage of Priests and permitting to have Nuns or Whores urging the worship of images in a word his care was not so much for Christianism as for Papism for he writ unto Pope Zachary saying How few soever Disciples God giveth me in this my charge I cease not to incline them to the obedience of the Apostolick See he caused the Monastery of Eulda to be built in favour of English men and was killed at Borna being suspected of a conspiracy 5. Many did preach and write against him and his superstitions as Adelbert The opposers of his Rites a French Bishop and Sidonius an Arch-Bishop of Bavaria Samson a Scot Bishop of Auxerre and Virgilius an Irish man Bishop of Juvavia as Nauclerus and Aventine do record Boniface dilateth them unto Pope Zachary and as Bern. Lutzenburg in Catol writeth the Pope in a Synod at Rome condemneth them depriveth them of their Priesthood and excommunicateth them before they were heard and when they sought to be heard and plead their cause in a Synod Boniface denied access unto them and said Excommunicated men should not be admitted into a Synod nor have the benefit of the Law So partly by tyranny of the Pope and partly by authority of Pipin Boniface did oppress all his adversaries Catal. test ver ex vita Bonifac. Particularly one Clemens did reprove Boniface 1. That he did so advance the authority of the Roman Bishop seeing all Teachers are equally successours of the Apostles 2. That he condemned the marriage of Priests 3. That he did speak too much for the Monkish life 4. That he had anointed the King of France contrary to the undoubted right of the Merovei 5. That he appointed Masses for the dead and other new Rites unknown in the Church heretofore Aventin Annal. lib. 3. Epist Zachar. ad Bonif. in tom 2. Concil 6. Albine or Alcwin had good knowledge of the Latine and Greek languages Alcwin and his doctrines Charls the Great calleth him his Master in an Epistle written unto him deseptuages sexages Biblioth de la Bigne tom 3. where are some of his works On Ps 51. he writeth thus It is said unto the Father Then wilt thou accept the sacrifice of righteousness that is the most glorious passion of the Son who offered himself a sacrifice for all men that they might attain salvation which the world did not deserve by their works Ibid. When I look on my self I find nothing in me but sin thy righteousness must deliver me it is thy mercy and not my merits that saveth me we are quickned by the mercy of God in the name of our Saviour and not by our merits In his works he often useth the word merite but here we may see in what sence he and others do understand it On the fourth poenit Ps I could defile my self but I cannot cleanse my self unless thou Lord Jesu do cleanse me by sprinkling thy holy blood No good can be in us unless it be thy working grace who hast made us On Ps 118. Thou hast made me to be desirous of thy Commandments make me also able to do help that I may do what thou commendest and give what thou commandest And in another place Free-will abideth as yet in men by nature that in whom God willeth he may be pleased to make free by grace that they have not an evil will for since the first man by free-will was sold under sin the freedom of man is evil because the goodness of the will is taken away from the free-will which goodness none can have of himself unless he have it being helped by the grace of God's mercy without whose help free-will can neither turn unto God nor make any progress unto God He hath the like words in lib. 2. de Trinit cap. 8. On Eccles cap. 1. The Sun Christ inlightneth all things with the splendour and vertue of his spiritual grace in whose punishment is our salvation he ariseth to them who believe in him and he goeth down to every unbeliever Ibid. cap. 3. We should rejoice in this spiritual pleasure of meat and drink not only in the Sacrament but in reading the Holy Scriptures also where we may eat and drink of the Tree of life Ibid. cap. 7. Let us consider the works of God how great and wondrous they are and how in his free mercy he hath chosen one and in his just judgement he despiseth another as it is written of the Twins I have loved Jacob and hated Esau In Praefa lib. 1. de Trinit We should all pray that the Catholick faith which only quickneth mankind and only doth sanctifie may be truly fixed in the hearts of all men by one confession Ca. 1. Although we be thrown down from the joy of blessed felicity into the miserable blindness of this exile for the just punishment of original sin yet we are not so cut off that even in this changable and temporary estate we know not to seek and desire eternity truth and blessedness which is clear in that we have not a will to die nor be deceived nor be miserable whence is this natural instinct that all men would be blessed although this appetite is diversly in the minds of particular persons some think to be blessed in riches The whole divine Scriptures exhort us to be lifted up from earthly unto heavenly things where is true and eternal blessedness unto which it is most certain that none can attain but by the faith of the Catholick peace In Praefa lib. 2. All the authority of the holy books serve unto us to make us believe rightly of God and to love him with all our heart but the sight of man's mind is not able to behold the most excellent light of God's Majesty unless it be inlightned by the brightness of the righteousness of faith and love through the gift of God's grace therefore we should pray for the grace of God that the ey of our heart may be cleansed to see how properly the Trinity is the one and only and true God and how rightly the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit is said understood and beleeved to be one and the same substance Lib. 3. cap. 1. What did the human nature in the man Christ deserve that it should be assumed into the unity of the person of the only Son of God what good will what desire of
intend to hold unto our last breath wee firmly believe of the Holy Ghost wee believe the Holy Ghost and in the Holy Ghost Of the Holy Ghost that he is the one true God with the Father and the only begotten Sonne distinguished in this only that he proceeds from both by vertue of which faith quickning renewing reforming every one attaineth the participation of Christs meritorions grace justification truth fortitude and perfect salvation by which Spirit also the Holy Church is grounded in the faith of Christ against which the gates of hell are not able to prevaile which also by the same Spirit in the members of true faith he washeth justifieth sanctifieth ordereth governeth gathereth strentheneth fructifieth As also by the same Spirit were the Holy Scriptures inspired and are known by him the members of the Church are vnited from him are the gifts of ruling the Church and many other things which by the same Spirit are made perfect unto the life of glory Wee believe the Holy Ghost when wee fully consent unto the Divine Scriptures or Apostls of God Wee believe in the Holy Ghost when with clear knowledge and unfained faith wee love him and with the members inspired by him wee keep his revealed truth unto eternall glory By the same fulness of formed faith wee believe that the holy Catholick Church in respect of the foundation of lively faith is the number of all the elect from the beginning of the world unto the end thereof whom God the Father in Christ by his Spirit hath chosen justifieth calleth unto the glory of salvation and magnifyeth without which is no salvation unto man But in respect of ministry and dispensations wee believe that the holy Catholick Church is the congregation of all Ministers and people subdued by obediente obeying the will of God from the beginning of the world unto the end of it whom God only sendeth inspired by his Spirit giving them the word of truth peace reconciliation that they may bring forth the fruit of salvation in the unity of the Church and their travell be not disappointed of the saving reward whose names and number He only knoweth because he hath writen them in the book of life That first Church hath none that shal be damned and the other is mixed untill the appointed time of the last judgement But the Church of malignants seekes them that are of that evil one whom Satan sendeth in this time of mortall life to the perdition of the world and tryall of the elect On this Church all the curses and sad things that Christ his Apostls have foretold shall be heaped to wit that they who are unworthy of ecclesiastical honour may rule over them by their power The promises also of renovation are fulfilled in her And yet wee arrogate not so much unto us as that we would be called or bee the only Catholick Church as if salvation were to be found with us only but wee endeavour with all diligence to be partakers of the ecclesiasticall truth and wee are afraied to be subject unto orobey evill workers whom wee find to be enmies of the Church and its truth for fear of everlasting damnation and for obedience unto Christ and because they doe minde speak and doe unto his Church things contrary unto his law Wherefore wee willingly endure oppression tauntings and calumnies for the salvation of our souls for un less Holy fear and the horrour of hell did withhold us we would embrace the liberty of the world with it's vanities wherin one may live as he listeth But wee would rather choose the strait derided and sad way in which our Redeemer Christ and the Church his spouse condemned by the world and despised yet following the example of Christ have walked than to taste and follow the momentany pleasures of the world The first and chief ministry of the Church is the Gospell of Christ whereby grace and truth that were painfully purchased by the torment of the cross is revealed which grace is given for salvation by the Holy Ghost and God the Father unto the Elect which are called by the gift of faith Another necessary ministry of the Church wee declare to be the word of teaching by which the saving truth is known in the sense of faith through which knowledge the life of grace and glory is administred unto the men of good desire Likewise wee declare that the seven sacraments are useful unto the Church of Christ by which Sacraments the promises of God are signified to be fulfilled unto believing people and by them entrance into the Church of God for keeping unity among them that walk unto glory is ministred Faith which God gives causeth us think of baptisme the first Sacrament these things whosoever of ripe age by hearing Gods word believeth and believing is renewed in soul and is enlightened such by outward washing for argument of inward cleanness attained by faith should be baptized in the name of the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost into the vnity of the holy Church Our profession is also extended unto children which by the decree of the Apostles as Dionysius writes should be baptized and then by the guidance of their God-fathers being instructed in the law of Christ should be invited unto and accustomed with the life of faith By faith received out of the Holy Scriptures wee professe that in the dayes of the Apostls this was observed whoesover in their young years had not received the promises of the gifts of the Holy Ghost such did receive them by prayer and imposition of hands for confirmation of aith Wee thinke the same of infants Whosoever being baptized shall come to the true faith which he purposeth to follow through adversities and reproaches so that new birth appeareth in his spirit and life of grace such a one should be brought unto the Bishop or priest and being demanded of the truths of faith and of Gods commandements and of his good will and constant purpose and works of truth and shall testify by confession that all these things are so such a one is to be confirmed in the hope of attained truth and he is to be helped by the prayers of the Church that the gifts of the Holy Spirit may be increased in him for the constancy and warrefare of faith and finally for confirming the promises of God and the truth that he hath he may be associated into the Church by laying on of hands in vertue of the name of the Father of the Word and of the Holy Spirit By this faith which we have drunk from the Holy Scriptures we believe and confesse with our mouth Wheresoever a worthy priest with believing people according to the mind and purpose of Christ and order of the Church shall shew forth his prayer with these words This is my bodie and This is my blood immediatly the present bread is the body of Christ which was offered unto death for us and so the present wine is his blood shed
for the remission of sins This profession of our faith is confirmed by the words of Christ which are written by the Evangelists and Holy Paul Unto this profession may be added this body of Christ and his blood should according to the institution of Christ and his Church should be taken in both kindes of bread wine in remembrance of his death and of his blood shed as he said Doe this in remembrance of mee Then this death of Christ as it is declared in the Gospel and the fruits of his death should be preached as also the hope of his blood shed as the Apostle witnesseth saying So oft as ye eat of this bread and drink of this cup ye shall shew forth the Lords death untill He come Thirdly according to the sure knowledge of spiritual truth of which the Euangelist John doth write as also for assurance of giving taking using and of truth by faith in hope as the Lord saith Take and eat Take and drinke Fourthly for the conjunct use for according to the institution and practise of Christ and the primitive Church the Priest should then administer when the necessity of believers requireth and he should receive with them as He saith Doe yee this in remembrance of mee And Paul saith The cup which we blesse is it not the communication of the blood of Christ and the bread which we break is it not the partaking of the body of Christ for wee many are one bread and one body who are partakers of that one bread and one cup. Fifthly for distinction of believers from the unbelievers and unworthy and for excommunication and rebuke of those who being defiled with the spot of vices do refuse to amend Of this saith Paul I would not have you partakers with the Devils yee can not drinke of the cup of the Lord and the cup of Devils And again he saith Put away the evill from yourselves for if any who is called a brother among you be covetous or a fornicator or an idolater or a dronkard or a railer or a thief with such a one eat ye not Behold this is our faith most Gracious King concerning the body and blood of Christ which as we are afraid to change or forsake these things which our Lord JESUS hath been pleased to testifie and for which end we doe now declare it so neither dare we add any thing unto it which the Lord of the Sacrament hath not added as also the primitive Church which followed Christ in poverty and affliction in singleness of heart hath not altered the ordinances of his law Concerning this Sacrament which our Lord through his great mercy hath ordained for love of his elect have many contentions arisen in opinions expositions and addition of sanctions or decrees so that contrary unto the intention of the Lord's institution they have furiously raged against others even to take away their lives But we for eschuing so great mischief have our refuge unto the faith of Christ even unto his words and meaning so often repeated in his word so that what He commanded to believe we do believe it simply and what He hath commanded to do we would do it faith fully truly we doe not only believe that that bread is His body which being taken and blessed and broken He testifieth to be his body but also if He had taken a stone and said This is my body we would have fully believed it Because of this our simple faith and because we will not suffer ourselves to forsake it for the opinion of men wee are called hereticks likwise for the actuall use unto which the word of Christ and his Apostles and the example of the work of the same sacrament doe invite us because we doe and use it so with upright faith in remembrance of the death of Christ wee are condemned judged worthy of prison and are afflicted for wee being tied unto Christs command and dissuaded by his forbidding doe worship him with reverence and honour due unto him and we feare to worship any other thing as him only sitting at the right hand with the Father and the Holy Ghost Wherefore gracious King let your highness understand that we do so not in contumacy or any contempt but for feare of God and in obedience unto him and wee pray that your Highness would shew compassion on us who are condemned for the faith of Christ as wee wish that the most High would of his grace be pleased to preserve and keep your honour from his wrath By the same faith we believe that the ordination of priests is truly from the high Bishop and great priest that in stead of the embassage of Christ the ministery preaching of the gospell doctrine judging offering of prayers by men thanksgivings and praises may be done unto God by them And it is from God unto men that the promise of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that the promises of God may be verified in hope of the received true faith and by excommunication the wicked may be debarred from that good And by the same faith wee confesse that they who intend to ordain others should follow the example of Christ and should consummate his ambassage with a right mind without respect of persons free from covetousness and simony By the same faith we declare that they which are to be ordained or promoted to higher or inferior orders should excell other believers in a godly life and faith in Christ for a lively faith sanctifieth and maketh fit unto all offices and possesseth the blessing and life for good works of an honest conversation are the garments and ornaments of a priest to the glory of the heavenly Father and example of the people and shew the vertue of the word they should also have more aboundant gifts of the Holy Spirit to wit more servent love toward Christ confidence of their own and their nieghbours salvation trust in God equity of mind a wholsome feeling of faith in a good conscience theire feet prepared unto the Gospell of peace prudence of Spirit knowledge of Gods law discerning of Spirits and the like What clerck soever by such an ordination is advanced unto the priesthood wee professe that such an ordination is a Sacrament because it is a signe of the true priesthood of Christ Jesus and of his ordination by God the Father and a forme of the ministry as of the head of his Church to offer unto God the incense of truth in Christ Wee approve that three things are necessary unto the full gradation of a presbyter first the the triall of his life faith gifts and fidelity in lesser things that are intrusted unto him another prayers with fasting thirdly the giving of power with words suitable there unto and the imposition of hands for corroboration By faith wee doe testify that marriage is a lawfull honest and
decent union in Christ of twoe persons man and woman keeping a chast bed without breach and it is a signe of a great truth to wit the coupling of Christ with the Church and a believing soul By faith wee affirme that if God give a contrite and humbled heart for sin unto a falling sinner having the true faith of Christ and if with heart and mind and really he repent of his former sins such a one being so truly disposed if he find a presbyter able to discerne good from evill and whose lips preserve the knowledge of Gods law he should reveale uprightly unto such a priest his sins by confession by whom as a judge ruling in stead of God and the Church according to the law of the Lord the weight of the fault may be rightly discerned to the end he may be ashamed and being corrected he may have advice of repentance unto reformation of himself and being either loosed or bound by Christs keyes he may obey humbly and that such humble contrition of the heart is a sacrament that is a signe of true grace bestowed on the repentant But if there be not a heart contrite humbled through faith abhorring vice and an afflicted Spirit embracing the will of God and also confession with relaxation of the fault and moreover if fained satisfaction be added wee pronounce it to be a vain signe and void of the grace of Christ The anointing of the sicke containes two things in it first a cause of a more ready approaching unto the diseased for this it is not a sacrament the other is the thing signified by that unction which is given by God in Christ for which thing prayer especially should be made in true faith that it may be given unto the sick believer as blessed James commandeth saying Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray for him anointing him in the name of God and the prayer of the faithfull shall save him and the Lord wil relieve him and if he be in sins they shall be forgiven him By faith of the sick the signe of unction assures him of the forgiveness of sins When wee have declared the faith of the Catholick Church and her truth by which truth holiness is given unto her it remaines to declare by the same certainty of faith the communion of Saints The communion of the Saints is when the members of the Holy Church doe for common benefite use the good free saving and administring grace of God which is given without repentance and they exercise themselves according to the grace of God given unto them to the common utility of others It is cleare then that the elect only are partakers of true faith grace and righteousness in Christ by his merite unto the glory of eternall salvation as also they receive the sacraments to the evidence of faith albeit they have been seduced yet damnation shall not ceize upon them But the wicked of unformed faith albeit they communicate truly in the Sacraments digniries administrations and publick manners if they he destitute of true faith they communicate unworthily as hypocrites and if they follow the erroneous by their leading they fall into seduction and deceit By faith of Christs grace wee pronounce freely that who communicateth with a lively faith by the same he attaineth through Christ true remission of his sins and also because he partaketh of the Sacraments of the Church he getteth by the same faith and certainty the relaxation of crimes and at the time of the last judgement in the resurrection the glorification of his soul Amen The Letter which they sent with this Confession is worthy of reading But for brevity I omit it When the Confession was delivered their adversaries ceased not to accuse them still as if they had writen otherwise then they did believe or practize and so the King went on in cruelty against them Wherefore they sent another Apologie where in they tooke God to witness of the injuries done unto them by their adversaries and that they had writenin singleness of heatt nor did their tongue dare to speak what their heart did not believe There also they expresse them selves more clearly in some particulares as concerning the Eucharist they say Wee do not only believe and confesse that the bread is the naturall bodie and the wine is the naturall blood sacramentally but also that the bread is the Spirituall bodie and the wine is the Spirituall blood And to believe this we are induced by the saying of the Apostle Paul The bread which we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ and the cup ..... for wee that are many are one bread and one bodie for wee are partakers of one bread and of one cup ...... The Redeemer of mankind hath commanded to take eate and to doe that in remembrance of him but no command is given unto believers to worship the sacramental subsistence of Christ's body and blood for Christ gave unto his disciples sitting what they should use and they obeying him did eat and drink but did not worship the sacrament And the Apostles and their successours for a long space of time went to the houses of believers and break the bread with joy and certainly they did not worship the sacrament nor in so doing did they erre nor were called hereticks But they did worship the personall subsistence of Christ at the right hand of the Father And unto the true worshippers of the Divine Majesty it is commanded in both the Testaments the old and new to worship and adore Christ very God and Man not in the sacramentall existence but in his naturall and personall subsistence at the right hand of his Father For the old Testament as the triumpher over Satan tempting him remembreth saith It is wrtiten Thou shall worship the Lord thy God and him only shall thou serve The vessell of election explaines the New when he saith God hath exalted him and given him a name which is a bove every name that at the name of JESUS every knee should bowe .... The incarnat truth confirmes this when he saith That all men should honour the Sonne as they honour the Father But none doeth worship the Father in any creature but only in heaven as that prayer published by Christ testifieth Our Father which art in heaven c. In the words following because they were accused that they did not worship the Virgine Mary nor the Saints they shew that they did esteem of the Virgine as blessed above all women not only for that she was sanctified but also for that the Sonne of God did assume a body of her body and they esteem of all them who were sanctified by faith in the grace of God through Christs merite and so as blessed of God they doe honour them with due honour they love them and would follow them but they can not give them more honour than Gods word directs them 10. When
they make void ipso facto the name of redemption for every one who is redeemed certainly is delivered from bondage Whence then is the man redeemed if he was not captive under guilt it is clear therefore that he is very unwise who thinks so Then he bringeth the example of the Thief on the Cross who being a sinner was changed by inward grace upon the Cross Here by the way observe Gregory useth the word meritum but in another sense then the Papists do now for in the same place he saith Divine Grace finds not mans merit that he may or should come but when he hath come he makes it and God coming into an unworthy soul maketh it worthy by coming and he maketh in it merit that he may reward who did find only what he might have punished He makes it clear in cap. 26. They who hold that a man is saved by his own power do guess that the confession of man is by vertue of the man self which if it were so the Psalmist would not say to the praise of God Confessio magnificentia est opus ejus we receive therefore from him to confess from whom it is given unto us to do great things c. There thorow three chapters Gregory speaks against mans merit or deserving and he teacheth that it is only by the grace of God that man is able to do any good and when he useth the word meritum in a good sense he understandeth simply good works without the ad-signification of deserving He useth also the word meruit improperly as in the same book cap. 33. Abraham did never profess himself to be but dust and ashes untill habere Dei meruit collocutionem where that word cannot signifie to deserve but to attain as also Bernard in Cant. ser 2. saith Herod would have seen Christ but because not of a good mind non meruit that is he obtained not Again on Ps 7. poeniten Gregory saith at the word auditam fac although God bestoweth Heaven according to works yet he giveth it not for works If the blessedness of the righteous be of mercy what is that He will render to every one according to his works And if it be rendred according to works how is it called mercy It is one thing according to works and another for works where it is said according to works the qualification of works is meaned that whose good works are seen shall have the reward of glory for no labour or works can be compared unto that blessed life where we shall live with God and in God It is sure then that to whom it is mercifully given to do well in this life unto those it is more mercifully given that they shall be rewarded a hundred-fold in everlasting blessedness This is the grace that as the Apostle saith shall be given for grace unto the Saints of God to whom is given from God the grace of holiness in this life to them shall be given the grace of eternal felicity in the life to come On Iob lib. 9. cap. 1. A godly man because he seeth all the merit of his vertue to be vice if it be narrowly examined by the inward Judge will truly say I cannot answer for one of a thousand by a thousand is oft meaned universality In lib. 20. cap. 4. he saith fitly if I would have gone unto them for as it is written Eph. 1. he worketh all things according to the counsell of his will not according to our merit but because he so willeth the Lord enlighteneth us with his visitation And so when he willeth he cometh and when he cometh he sitteth first both because his coming into our heart is of his favour and the appetite of desiring him in our thoughts is not equal to our other desires It followeth When I sate The Lord sitteth as King in the heart because he governs the buzzing motions of the heart Lib. 23. cap. 18. An afflicted heart in all that it desireth and yet feeleth the contrary order of things would so far as can be have an answer from the voice of God why it is so or so that it may have the advice of God in every controversie and then rest knowing his answer But in fore-seeing that God would give the Holy Scripture that in it he might answer both the publick and private questions of men saith Thou contendest with him that he hath not answered to all thy words God speaks once and will not repeat it as if he had said God answereth not to the private voices of every heart but he gives such a word by which he satisfieth the questions of all men for in the words of his Scripture every one of us find our causes if we inquire nor is it needfull that what each one suffereth particularly we should ask a particular answer by the voice of God In Ezek. lib. 1. hom 9. Behold the voice of God biddeth the Prophet when he lieth to arise but he could not arise at all unless the Spirit of the Almighty had entred into him because by the grace of the Almighty God we may indeavour unto good works but we cannot do them if he who commandeth doth not help So when Paul did admonish his Disciples saying With fear and trembling work forth your salvation immediately he sheweth who worketh these good things in them saying God worketh in you both the will and the deed Hence truth himself saith Without me ye can do nothing but here it is to be considered because if our good things be so the gift of God that something in them be not ours why seek we eternal reward as for works But if they be so ours that they are not the gift of God why give we thanks for them unto God But we must know that our evils are ours only but our good things are both God's and ours because he preveeneth us by inspiring that we do will and he following us by helping lest we will in vain that we may fullfill what he willeth therefore by preveening grace and good will following that which is the gift of God becomes our work which Paul declareth shortly and well saying I have laboured more then they all and lest he might seem to ascribe unto his own vertue what he had done he addeth yet not I but the grace of God with me for because he was prevented by heavenly gift he confesseth himself as a stranger from his own work yet not I but because preveening grace had made will in him free and good that by free-will he had followed the same grace unto the work he addeth But the grace of God with me as if he had said I have laboured in the good work yet not I but I also for in respect that I was prevented by the meer gift of God not I but in respect that I followed the gift with my will I also These things I have said shortly against Pelagius and Coelestine Truth himself saith of the Preachers of Antichrist
thought of their Gods Impious was the opinion of Vigilantius who deprived the Martyrs of all honour if he did so Foolish was that of Eunomius who would not enter into the Churches of Martyrs lest he were compelled to adore the dead Martyrs are to be reverenced and not adored as God as Jerom writeth against Vigilantius And in his next Annotation he saith But now the fashion is when religion is solemnized unto Christ who delivered mankind by his death to shew plaies unto the people nothing differing from the old scenical plaies although I say no more he will think it fitly enough who shall hear it sports are made of a most serious purpose He continueth shewing their abhominable sports Hither may be referred another History in Chrysostom to 1. in his book against the Heathens The Apostate Emperour Julian went to the Temple of Apollo at Daphne and with great instance did ask a response concerning a purpose intended by him and it was answered This place of Daphne is full of dead bodies which hath averted the Oracle whereupon Julian commandeth to take away the body of Babylas There Chrysostom argueth against the Emperour that Babylas were mightier then Julian's God But the good man did not conceive the policy of the Divel by subtily instilling into the minds of imprudent men a superstitious fancy concerning the reliques of the dead and their power as Bellarmine de cultu Sanctor lib. 2. cap. 2. would prove from the same example that the reliques should be adored And whereas he alledgeth that the miracles that were done at the graves of the Martyrs were done to the end these reliques should be worshipped Augustine de civit Dei lib. 22. cap. 9. saith contrarily Unto what faith did these miracles attest save unto that where Christ is preached to have risen in the flesh and to have ascended into Heaven in the flesh for even the Martyrs were Martyrs that is witnesses of this faith they giving testimony unto this faith did indure the enmitie of the world and did overcome them not by fighting but by dying for this faith they died who may obtain these things from the Lord for whose name they were killed for this faith their wondrous patience hath gone before that in these miracles so great power might follow for if the resurrection of the flesh eternally hath not gone before in Christ or shall not be as is fore-told by Christ or was fore-told by the Prophets who had also prophecied of Christ why can the Martyrs do so great things who were killed for that faith by which the resurrection is preached For whether God worketh by himself in a wondrous way whereby the eternal worketh temporarie things or if he doth those things by his servants and the same things that he doth by his servants whether he doth some of them by the spirits of the Martyrs as by men that are as yet in the bodie or all these by his Angels whom he commandeth invisibly and without bodies so that what things are said to be done by Martyrs are done by them praying and obtaining and not working or whether these things be done some one way and some another which can no way be comprehended by mortals nevertheless they give testimonie unto that faith which preacheth the resurrection of the flesh for ever So far he Hence we see that Augustine will not say definitively that the miracles were done by the Saints and that he holdeth that they were for confirmation of the faith which the Martyrs did believe and preach and for no other faith But most certain it is not any Martyr did ever teach or believe that Saints or their reliques should be worshipped Add the testimonie of Ge. Cassander in Consult art 21. We read saith he that of old they made vows and undertook pilgrimages unto places famous for the reliques of Martyrs which then was profitable while the memorie of the Martyrs was yet fresh and certain and while God by undoubted miracles did shew that their souls do live whose bodies were dead thereby confirming the faith which they did profess But abuses did by little and little creep in for Basil did complain that in his daies this custom was corrupt and in the time of Augustine the custom of bearing meat unto the graves of Martyrs was forbidden by Ambrose as is clear in Augustine Confess lib. 6. cap. 2. and in latter times too much hath been given to the reliques and memories of Saints when wicked men began to put false confidence in foolish worship which abuse is condemned by the Councel at Cabilon Cap. 45. and other corruptions were added to wit for gain false reliques were daily suggested and feigned miracles were reported superstition was thereby fostered and by illusion of the Divel new reliques were invented which abuse is condemned by a Councel at Lions at this day the world seems to be full of reliques so that it may be feared that upon due examination most detestable impostures may be manifested as in some places it is made manifest as of old it hapned unto Saint Martine who did find under the famous name of a Martyr the monument not of a Martyr but of a wicked Robber Wherefore it seems good to abstain from all ostentation of reliques and to stir up the people to reverence the true reliques that is to follow the examples of their godliness and vertues that are extant written by them or of them Thus Cassander hath observed two corruptions to wit superstitious confidence in the worship of true reliques and a sacrilegious forging of false reliques But now the superstitious custom of Rome is come to such height that Jesuit Vasques is licentiated to send in publick That the very worms may be worshipped with a good intention and sincere faith as if the worms consumers of the holy reliques were filled with some vertue yet not to be worshipped publickly Vasq lib. 3. adorat cap. 8. num 114. and Bellarm li. cit cap. 4. saith The reliques of Saints to wit their bones ashes cloaths c. are to be adored although not with the same kind of adoration as the spirits of the Saints yet with more than human or civil worship to wit with religious supplication kissing circumgestation thurification lighting of Tapers c. 8. In former times many were desirous to see Jerusalem but others did disswade Pilgrimages them as Jerom to 1. Ep. ad Paulin. saith It is laudable not to have been in Jerusalem but to have lived well in Jerusalem for that Citie is to be sought which killed not the Prophets nor shed the blood of Christ but which maketh the currents of the flood glad which being on a mountain cannot be hid which the Apostle calleth the mother of the Saints in which he rejoiceth that he had freedom with the righteous Neither in saying so do I reprove my self of inconstancie or condemn what I do that I seem in vain after the example of Abraham to have forsaken my kindred
and countrie but I dare not inclose the omnipotencie of God in narrow bounds and restrain him in a little part of the earth whom the Heaven cannot comprehend Every one of the believers are weighed not according to the diversitie of places but by excellencie of faith and true worshippers do adore the Father neither at Jerusalem nor on mount Garizim because God is a Spirit and his worshippers must worship him in spirit and truth the spirit bloweth where he pleaseth the earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof since the Fleece of Judea is dried up and all the World is wet with the dew of Heaven and many comming from the East and West are set down in the bosom of Abraham God hath ceased to be known in Juda only and his name to be great in Israel but the sound of the Apostles hath gone thorow all the World and their words unto the ends of the earth Our Saviour being in the Temple said unto his Disciples Arise let us go hence and unto the Jews Your house shal be left desolate seeing Heaven and Earth shall pass away certainly all earthly things shall pass away therefore the places of the Cross and Resurrection are profitable unto them who bear their Cross and they rise with Christ daily who shew themselves of so great habitation Moreover they say The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord let them hear from the Apostle Ye are the Temple of the Lord and the Holy Ghost dwelleth in you both from Jerusalem and from Brittan is the gate of Heaven equally patent Antonius and all the multitude of Monks of Aegypt Mesopotamia Pontus Cappadocia and Armenia have not seen Jerusalem and without this Citie the gate of Paradise is patent unto them Blessed Hilarion although he was born and lived in Palestina saw Jerusalem but one day only that he might not seem to despise the holy places for their vicinitie nor yet include the Lord in one place You will say Why go I so far off To the end thou shouldest know that nothing is deficient to thy faith though thou hast not seen Jerusalem and that thou think not us the better that we enjoy the habitation of this place but whether here or there thou shalt have alike reward according to thy works Augustine also in his book de morib eccl cathol cap. 34. complaineth that many did adore graves and pictures and some did drink upon the dead and luxuriously burie themselves upon the buried which abuses the Church indeavoureth daily to amend Agreeable unto this complaint is that passage in Gregorie lib. 9. Ep. 71. Whereas the English were wont to sacrifice Oxen to their Gods and on that day they did feast and make merrie Gregorie adviseth Way was given unto rites for a time Augustine to turn that Divelish solemnitie into a feast of dedication or birth-day of some Martyr and then to kill the Oxen not to the Divel but to praise God when they did eat to the end that the hard-hearted people be not discouraged for want of a merrie day to forsake their idolatrie and because they who will climb high must go by degrees And lib. 12. Ep. 31. speaking of the English he saith according to the Apostle who saith I gave you milk to drink and not strong food I have yeelded now these things unto them but not to be held or continued in after-times lest the good which is lately planted and yet but of a tender root be pulled up but rather being begun may be strengthned and carried to more perfection Truly if those things that we have done be otherwise then we should have done know thou that it was not done for the thing it self but by commiseration Whence it appears that not only these feasts at the graves but many other rites came into the Church by condescending unto the rudeness of the Gentiles and they who at first did indulge them did not simply allow these rites but would by degrees bring the people unto the Christian faith and they would not have used them if the rude people would have imbraced the puritie of God's worship But afterwards especially in the Western Churches religion did consist for the most part in such rites and if people would observe these little care was to inform them in the faith Then as in the preceding 200. years people had affection towards Jerusalem so when the Bishop of Rome was called the Universal Bishop people forgat Jerusalem for a space and looked towards Rome and would go thither to confess their sins as we will find more particularly and yet even then many did reprove it as followeth for the present I will add but one testimonie of Bernard in Ep. 113. ad Lelbert Abbat S. Michae saying This your son having forsaken by my counsel his peregrination though he undertook it by your licence hath returned for when we knew that he had attempted it in levitie and you had yeelded because of his importunitie we reproved him sharply as he was worthy and perswaded him to return repenting so far as we could guess of his levitie and improbitie and promising amendment hereafter we judging righteously that howsoever one be guiltie he should exerce repentance in his own Monasterie rather then by going from Province to Province for the purpose of Monks is not to seek the earthly but heavenly Jerusalem and that not by walking on foot but by amending in affections thus Bernard And when the worship of Saints and reliques was once received it was easie for Priests to perswade pilgrimages unto this or that monument either for pennance or some special remedie to be found there more than in another place Bellarm. de cult Sanct. lib. 1. cap. 20. Of this hear Pol. Vergil saying We read not go to any part of the earth to seek God who is everie where but some have no such intention but rather go to behold the image of some Saint never thinking in all their journey of God far contrarie to the worship that was prescribed by the Fathers Against such men may well be applied that of Persius O souls prone to the earth and void of Heaven Why should we use such rites in our Churches and in the way they feed themselves delicatelie and lest they wax sad they have with them some Pleasant I will not say their Whores or Mistresses to cause them to laugh and tell them merrie sports as it were to refresh their wearied minds O vain travel we should sojourn that being sequestred from domestick cares which divert us from thinking upon the other life to dart the bodie and cause it to do service unto reason and give unto the poor as Christ commandeth Vergil in Interpret Orat. Dom. 9. Out of what is said may be partlie seen what was the estate of the Western Of Monks Church in the daies of Pope Gregorie the I. and that after him a thicker mist arose out of the Sea as indeed puritie of Doctrine perished
also that in the end of that Synod the Britan Bishops confessed that it was the right way of justice and righteousness which Augustine taught But it is clear from Beda that the Britans did oppose all that he spoke and they who said so were at the first meeting when Augustine had not discovered himself Likewise out of the Interrogatories that Augustine sent unto Gregory the I. and are with the answers in the end of Gregory's works it is easie to be seen that the first Arch-Bishop of Canterbury was no learned Clark but very superstitious and especially in the eighth answer that he was ambitious in that he did aim to have the Bishop of France subject unto him After the death of Augustine Laurence who did come from Rome with him took his charge he did invite the Scots dwelling in the same Island unto a Synod and thought to have found them meliores saith Beda lib. 2. cap. 4. readier to his mind than the Britans were but he found no less opposition by them for the Scots differed nothing from the Britans Dagan and Columban did refuse all communion with him and would not lodge in the same Inn where any Romish Bishop was If we compare all these premises we may see the cause why our Writers have spoken so diversly of Augustine some calling the English conversion a perversion and i●ebriation and others terming it a gracious conversion to wit when they consider how Pagans by the light of the Gospel were brought unto the faith though tainted with some errours they do with the Angels of Heaven rejoice in remembrance of that English happiness but when they consider that the old Professours of the ancient faith were by the importunity and ambition of Augustine and his successours inthralled in multitude of new inventions and in an unjust subjection yea and that so many were martyred by means at least by suggestion of Augustine justly have they termed this work of Augustine a perversion of the faith so giving this twofold censure in the spirit of discretion and not of contradiction even as Christ knew and approved the works of Ephesus but he had some things against her 2. The difference in observing Easter was thus The Romans in remembrance Difference for Easter of Christ's resurrection did observe the first Sunday after the full Moon of March and the Eastern Church as also the Britans kept the fourteenth day of the Moon on whatever day of the week it fell For this matter was no small debate between the Greek and Latine Churches long before as also in Britain about the year 657. betwixt Finnan a Scot and Bishop of Lindsfarn and Ronan another Scot and coming lately from Rome Finnan was so reverenced by the Romish faction that nothing was altered in his daies and he writ a book Proveteri Paschatos ritu Beda hist lib. 3. cap. 25. This jar was renewed about the year 670. by Wilfrid Bishop of York who had been at Rome Colman a Scot and Successour of Finnan and Cedda who afterwards was Bishop of York defend the old custom alledging as is before that this Island had received their rites from Asia and had kept them from the beginning of their conversion untill this time Wilfrid and Agilbert a Bishop and Agatho a Priest and James a Deacon said Rome should be preferred above Asia because the bones of Peter were at Rome Colman answereth that Anatolius and Eusebius Pamphili do evidently declare what were the rites of Asia and the same were received from John the Evangelist and were followed by Columba whom they could not deny to have been a good and devote man Wilfrid replieth The authority of Peter is greater for Christ said to him Thou art Peter and to thee will I give the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven Then another question was propounded concerning the shaving of the Clergy mens heads which the Scots did refuse But Beda hath not recorded the dispute In the end King Oswin said Seeing these rites were received by Saint Peter and now he is Porter of Heaven I will follow him lest he thrust me back when I come thither Beda loc cit When Colman saw that the authority of a rude Prince did oversway he would stay no longer but excluded his Bishoprick with Eata Abbot of Meilrose and thereafter he carried a Convent of Monks into one of the Isles Hebrides where they lived by the works of their hands Beda ibid. cap. 26. Wilfrid after that contest was accused of pride and misdemeanours but refused to answer and fled Then Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury set another in his place thus the controversie for Easter was ended in England And to end it altogether after other contests about the year 716. Ecbert or Berect as some call him an English man did so prevail amongst the Scots that Easter was kept in the Isle Hu after the Romish manner the 24. of April but he died suddainly The suddainness of his death Beda lib. 5. cap. 23. calleth a confirmation of his doctrine He might as well have said The Lord did approve the fact of Lot's wife 3. About the year 600. Brude King of Peichts though a Christian had The Conversion of the Saxons in Britain conjunct Wars with Ethelfrid King of Northumberland against Aidan King of Scots and Malgo a Duke of the Britans The Scots did prevail with great loss The report is saith Buchan hist Scot. lib. 5. that Columba Boetius calleth him Colm Abbot of the Monastery in Colmkill or Jona did assure his fellows of the victory the same hour of the fight After some years Ethelfrid renewing his forces came against the Scots Aidan waited for the Britans in vain and was put to flight with great slaughter on both sides After that fight Columba died for grief and Aidan was so commoved for the unlucky success and for the want of good Columba and for fear of the apparent danger of Christians from that cruel Pagan that within few weeks he died Not long after Ethelfrid was killed by the Britans as is said before Edwin succeedeth him and thereafter was setled in the general government of the Saxons Then the friends of Ethelfrid amongst whom were his seven sons and one daughter fearing cruelty fled into Scotland King Eugenius the 4. son of Aidan not regarding the hostility of their fathers accepted them and caused them to be instructed in the Christian faith Edwin was slain in Battel an 633. by Penda King of Mercia and Kedwalla King of the Britans there was never a more cruel Battel in this Island for Penda pursued the new converted Christians and Kedwalla would destroy the Saxons wherefore their rage did spare neither age nor sex Buchan hist Then Northumberland was divided into two Kingdomes Osrich cousin german of King Edwin was King of Deira and Eanfrid or Andefrid the eldest son of Ethelfrid was King of Bervici or North part they were both Christians the one instructed by Paulin Bishop of York and the other
from her and Apollinaris who said Christ is God and flesh only and never assumed a reasonable soul and Pelagius who said Christ is not the redeemer of infants because they are conceived without iniquity and born of their mother without sin and have no sin to be forgiven them and so Christ is not the Saviour of all the Elect and also other Hereticks who deny the Lord who bought them with the price of his blood because they preach him not as truth sheweth him but as they have feigned and therefore are become strangers from the Redeemer they do expect nothing certainly but the pit of perdition He writ three Books on the Song of Songs whereof the first is only in refutation of another book writen by Julian his Epistle to Celanen in Campania a Pelagian for a tast behold what he saith in the 1. page Julian teacheth that we by arbitrement of free-will may do good things what we will albeit by the help of God's grace we may perfect them the more easily as Travellers may walk on foot but with less turmoil without doubt if they ride on a horse He hath no mind of the Apostle's admonition saying Work out your salvation with fear and trembling for it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do And which is more weighty he is an adversary to him who saith not Without me ye can do some little thing but saith he Without me ye can do nothing And he teacheth that those only can behold the hid mysteries of the Law whom instruction and piety hath made wise forgetting the grace of God which revealeth the hid things of Scripture even to the unlearned and Idiots as the Evangelist saith Then he opened unto them their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures And the Evangelist witnesseth that they were unlearned when he saith They seeing the constancy of Peter and John and knowing that they were without letters and idiots did admire And he saith that holy and generous love ingraft in us from the very beginning of light by the gift of nature and unto our last old age leaning to the power of the mind may continue without any loss of its vigour Certainly he beleeveth not the Lord's word Without me ye can do nothing Nor what the Apostle saith In many things we all offend In these words Beda confuteth both the Pelagians and Semipelagians Of justification he saith on Luke 1 The wisedom of the just is not to presume of righteousness by the works of the law but to seek salvation by faith that although they being under the works of the law yet they should understand that they are saved by the grace of God through Christ for the just shall live by faith and Peter saith of the yoke of the law that neither we nor our fathers were able to bear it but we beleeve to be saby the grace of Christ even as they And on 1 Pet. 4. God is honoured by our works when all that we do well or according to his will we give it not all unto our merits but to his grace and on the other side what evil we do we depute it only unto our ignorance and wickedness Of the Church he saith on Cant. lib. 5. cap. 6. The Church is called Catholick because it is built through all the parts of the World in one peace and one fear of God and is filled with one and the same consort of the Spirit from which unity of the Spirit she is called a Dove and she is called perfect not because she only is filled with the people of the righteous but also is perfected by receiving all divine graces and vertues Here is no mention of restraining or subjecting the Church unto the Bishop of Rome And de Tabernac lib. 2. cap. 2. It was said unto Peter metaphorically Upon this Rock that is on our Saviour whom he had confessed will I build my Church And on Revel 21 when it is said Foundations in the plural number the teachers or graces are meaned when Foundation in the singular number he is meaned who is foundation of foundations Here is no Prerogative of Peter above the other Apostles Of Prayer on Prov. chap. 2. he saith We should invocate or pray unto none but God Of Christ's redemption on 1 John chap. 2. at these words And not for ours only he saith The Lord is a propitiation not for them only unto whom living then in the flesh John did write but also for all the Church which is dispersed in the breadth of the World even from the first elect unto the last who shall be born untill the end of the World This he writeth expressely against the Donatists but when he speaketh of the Church throughout the World he condemneth the restriction thereof unto Rome or any other particular place and when he limiteth the propitation unto the Elect he condemneth the opinion of the universality of Christ's death for the Reprobates And in the same place he saith Behold how John observeth that humility which he teacheth Certainly he was a just and great man who had drunk the secrets of mysteries from the Lord's breast and nevertheless he saith not Ye have me your Advocate with the Father but We have an Advocate and he said We have and not Ye have he would rather put himself in the number of sinners that he might have Christ to be his Advocate than put himself an Advocate for Christ and be found among the proud which shall be damned For all doth the Head make request of whom it is written Who is at the right hand of the Father and intercedeth for us The Lord intercedeth for us not by words but by miseration and he addeth The Just because the just Advocate will not plead unjust causes How shall not the just one defend us in judgement if now we acknowledge and accuse our selves unjust Why shall he not be just who now by tears is earnest saevit against his own unrighteousness Here he speaketh expressly of intercession and he acknowledgeth no intercessour in Heaven but the Head for all who mourn for their sins Of perseverance he saith on Col. 4. at the end where the Apostle saith I give thanks unto God being confident that he who hath begun the good work in you he will perfect it untill What else doth he promise but perseverance till the end through the mercy of God And when the Apostle Jude saith Unto him who is able to keep you without offence doth he very clearly shew that perseverance in good until the end is the gift of God In the first place Beda sheweth the certainty of perseverance as a thing promised and in the other he teacheth that it is not the work of man by himself alone even though the man be renewed but it is the gift of God And on Rom. 8. he saith We should stand the Calling whereby they are elected not who are elected because they shall beleeve but who are
he leaveth others in their wickedness and hath condemned them unto everlasting death In the Preface before 3 Reg. In all things we have need of aid from the Holy Spirit In 4 Reg. cap. 19. Whosoever by true faith toucheth the death of Christ and truly laieth hope on him shall without doubt be pertaker of his resurrection Catal. test ver lib. 10. 8. Raban Magnentius otherwise surnamed Maurus was famous in the University of Paris for Poesie Rhetorick Astronomy others Philosophy and Theology unto whom neither Germany nor Italy brought forth an equal saith Trithemius He became Abbot of Fulda where he was born and there he writ Commentaries on all the Books of the Bible His Monks were offended that he did so study the Scriptures and did not attend their Revenues as Trithem writeth therefore after 24 years he gave place to their anger and left the Abbey but they besought him to return and he would not but did abide with the Emperour Lewis untill Otgar Bishop of Ments died and Raban succeeded Tho. Walden in the daies of Pope Martin the V. reckoned him and Herebald or Reginbald Bishop of Altisiodor amongst Hereticks because they favoured Bertram Out of some of his works I have picked out these passages In Eccles lib. 4. cap. 7 he saith In meditating and reading The perfection of Scripture the Holy Scriptures we should be wary neither to add any thing to that which is written nor take away from those things which are comprehended by the Authours of Divine Scriptures in those books but we should thing of them with the highest veneration and with all our strength fullfill the commandments thereof Ibid. cap. 1 Man can now be saved no other way but by the death of Jesus Christ who is our Redeemer Ibid. lib. 5. cap. 5 The foundation A sure foundation which the Apostle Paul hath laied is one the Lord Jesus Christ upon this foundation both firm and stable and strong in it self is the Church of Christ builded In Ier. lib. 18. cap. 2. Lest they would say Our fathers were Against merits accepted for merits and therefore did they receive great things from God he adjoineth this was not for their merits but because it so pleased God whose free gift it is whatsoever he bestoweth De modo satisfact cap. 2. 17. Whatsoever one remembreth that he hath done wickedly let him declare it Confession unto the Priest by confession but if thou art ashamed to reveal thy sins before men cease not with continual supplications to confess them unto him from whom they cannot be hid and say Against thee only have I sinned he useth to heal not publishing thy shame and to forgive sin without upbraiding De Eucharist cap. 24. Behold what these two Sacraments do by Two Sacraments baptism we are regenerate in Christ and by the Sacrament of the body and blood regeneration is proved to continue not only by faith but by unity of flesh and blood Here he speaks but of two Sacraments and so he calleth them expressly But de Institut Cleric lib. 1. cap. 31. one may think that he speaks of more Sacraments for he saith Because we have spoken of more Sacraments Baptism and Chrism it remaineth that we speak of the other two that is of the body and blood of Christ But when he calleth the body and blood of Christ two Sacraments it is clear that he calleth the two elements two Sacraments and that is improperly And in cap. 28. of the forenamed book When the baptized person ascends out of the Fount immediately he is signed in the face by the Presbyter with holy chrism here he speaketh not of extream unction as they now speak but of an appendix of baptism as they were wont in those daies and this he calleth improperly another Sacrament but in that chap. de Eucharist he speaketh properly and nameth two baptism and the body and blood of Christ Ibid. cap. 41. And The signs are distinguished from the thing signified because he Christ according to the flesh must pierce the heavens to the end those who by faith are renued and born again in him might more earnestly and confidently long after him he hath left unto us this Sacrament as a visible figure and resemblance a sign and seal of his body and blood that by these things our minds and our bodies by faith may be more plenteously nourished to partake of invisible and spiritual things now it is the sign which we outwardly see and feel but that which is inwardly received is all substance and truth and no shadowing or resemblance and therefore there is nothing but truth and the Sacrament of the very flesh of Christ which is manifested unto us for the very flesh of Christ which was crucified and buried even the Sacrament of that true flesh it is which by the Priest upon the Altar through the word of Christ and power of the Holy Spirit is consecrated and hallowed See how Raban distinguishes that which is received outwardly and inwardly in the Sacrament and he calleth the outward part a visible figure and representation a sign and seal of the body and blood and that which is received inwardly is no shadow or resemblance but substance and truth even the very body of Christ which was crucified and as he saith in the first part of this testimony which hath pierced the Heavens De Institut Cleric lib. 2. cap. 30. Satisfaction is to exclude the occasions and suggestions of sin or not to commit sin again Reconciliation is that which is done after repentance for as we are reconciled unto God when we are converted first from gentilism so we are reconciled when after sin we return Lib. 2. cap. 57. He hath the Confession that was professed at that time saying 9. This is next unto the Creed of the Apostles the most certain faith A confession of faith which our Teachers have given That we should profess the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit of one essence of one power and sempiternity one invisible God so that the propriety of persons being reserved unto each one neither the Trinity should be divided substantially nor confounded personally to confess also that the Father is unbegotten the Son is the only begotten and the Holy Spirit is neither begotten nor unbegotten but proceedeth from the Father and from the Son that the Son proceedeth from the Father by generation the Holy Spirit not begotten but proceeding also that the Son did assume of the Virgin perfect manhood without sin that whom of his goodness only he had created of his mercy he might restore after he was fallen who verily was crucified and rose again the third day and with the same flesh being glorified he ascended into Heaven in the which flesh he is expected to come and judge the quick and the dead and that Christ in one person beareth both the divine and the human nature being perfect in both because neither the
said he may easily understand who will compare the new Divines with the ancient both Latine and Greek So far Berald Out of these two testimonies observe that Theophylact doth agree with the Ancients before him as Chrysostom Basilius and others of those ages whom he often quoteth and doth disagree from the multitude of Preachers in the Roman Church about the year 1533. Where then is their frequent gloriation of the constancy and unity of the Roman Church with the Ancient Fathers Hear then what Theophylact saith in the Articles of controversie in those daies In Prolog before Evang. Matth. he saith Because heresies were to bud forth which are ready to wast our manners it was thought necessary that the Gospels should be written to the end that we learning truth out of them should not be deceived with the lies of heresies and our manners should not altogether be undone On Cap. 13. near the end speaking of Christ and his mother he saith The mother would shew some human thing that she had power over her son for as yet she had no great thoughts of him and therefore while he was yet speaking she would draw him unto her Porsena here addeth on the margine Lege cautè To wit he saw that these words are against the Tenets of Rome that the Virgin was free from all sin and by right of her mother-hood she can command her son On Cap. 16. Because Peter had confessed that Jesus is the son of God he said that this confession which he had confessed shall be the foundation of Beleevers so that every man which shall build the house of faith shall lay this foundation for although we build many vertues and have not this foundation a right confession we do build unprofitably ..... They have power of binding and forgiving who receive the gift of Episcopacy or oversight as Peter did for although it was said unto Peter I will give unto thee nevertheless it was granted unto all the Apostles When when he said Whose sins ye forgive they are forgiven For when he said I will give he signifieth the time coming that is after the resurrection ...... When Peter speaks rightly Christ calleth him blessed but when he feareth without reason and will not have him to suffer he lasheth him and saith Go behind me Satan In Luc. cap. 2. Bishops should keep their Flock and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is sing in the field sing spiritual things and teach the people and hear divine visions and sayings Bethleem is the house of bread and what other is the house of bread but the Church in which bread is provided it is therefore the duty of spiritual Shepheards to seek heavenly bread which when they have seen they must preach it unto others ..... The things whereof the Scripture is silent we should not inquire On Cap. 16. Nothing is so profitable as diligent searching of the Scriptures the Divel may falsely and apparently make a search of the dead to deceive the unwise and from Hell he may sow doctrine according to his wickedness but those who do duly search the Scriptures nothing can delude them for the Scriptures are a lantern and light which when it shines the theef is found and made manifest therefore we should beleeve them and not regard the rising of the dead And a little before he saith As it is impossible for any man to pass from the company of the just into the place of sinners so it is impossible as Abraham teacheth us to pass from the place of punishment into the place of the just .... The bosom of Abraham is the possession of good things which are prepared for the just passing from the Waves of the Sea into the Haven of Heaven On Ioh. cap. 1. The new Testament is called grace because God gives freely unto us not only remission of sins but the adoption of children And it is called truth because whatsoever the Fathers saw in figure or spoke He hath here preached these clearly ........... Here we learn that the miracles of Christ's childhood are but feigned and lies and made up by them who would scorn the mystery for if these had been true how could the Lord have been unknown which wrought them for it is no way likely that he was not famous which did such miracles But it is not so for before he was baptized he wrought no signs neither was he known On Cap. 3. If thou knowest not the wind which is a Spirit subject to sense how searchest thou curiously of regeneration by the Spirit of God how and from whom it is breathed If this spirit cannot be comprehended far less is the grace of the Holy Ghost subject to the laws of nature Confounded therefore be Macedonius the fighter against the Holy Ghost and Eunomius before him for he would make the Spirit a servant although he hear in this place that the Spirit bloweth whither it will far rather hath the Holy Ghost a more free motion and doth work where he willeth and after what manner he willeth ...... When thou hearest that the Son of man came down from Heaven think not that his flesh came down from Heaven this did Apollinarius teach that Christ had a body from Heaven which did pass thorow the Virgin as thorow a Conduit But because Christ is one person consisting in two natures therefore whatsoever belongs to the Man-hood is spoken of the Word and again what belongs unto the Word is spoken of the Man So here the Son of Man is said to come down from Heaven because He is one person and again lest when ye hear it said The Son of Man came down you would think that he is not in Heaven He saith even he which is in Heaven for do not think that I am not there because I came down but both am I here bodily and I sit there as God with the Father ..... Here we learn that the old Testament is like or of the same nature with the new and there is but one giver of the old and new Testament although Marcion and Manicheus and that rabble of Hereticks deny it He teacheth also that since the Jews beholding the brazen Serpent did escape death far rather we looking on him which was crucified and beleeving shall escape the death of the soul ..... Adam died justly because he sinned but the Lord died unjustly because he had not sinned .... and because he died unjustly he overcame him by whom he was killed and so delivered Adam from death which was laid justly upon him On Cap. 6. Diligent faith is a guide unto good works and good works do conserve faith for both works are dead without faith and faith without works ....... He saith I am the bread of life he saith not I am the bread of nourishment but of life for when all things were dead Christ maketh us alive by himself who is that bread in so far as we beleeve that the leaven of mankind is heated by the fire
of his God-head and He is the bread of life not of this natural but of that unchangeable life which fails not by death And who beleeveth in that bread shall not suffer hunger by hearing the Word of God nor suffer spiritual thirst because he hath the water of Baptism and sanctification of the Spirit ... And shewing that faith in Christ is not a common thing but a gift of God and given by the Father to the upright in heart he saith Whomsoever the Father gives unto me he shall come unto me that is they shall beleeve in me whom my Father gives unto me .... And I will not cast him out which comes unto me that is I will not lose him but I will save and I will refresh him with much diligence for I came from Heaven to do no other thing but the will of my Father And near the end of that Chapter he saith When ye hear that his Disciples went away do not think it of his true Disciples but of them who did follow in the order of Disciples and seemed to have the form of Disciples while they were taught by him for there were some among his Disciples who being compared with the other multitude were called his Disciples for they abode longer time then the multitude but being compared with others which were true Disciples they were not to be considered because they beleeved him but for a time and as I might say with a cold heat .... The flesh profiteth nothing ... the flesh that is to expound these words carnally profiteth not but are the occasion of scandal So then they who understood carnally the things spoken by Christ were offended Therefore he addeth The words I speak are spirit that is are spiritual and life having no fleshly thing and bringing eternal life Shewing that it is the excellency of the God-head to reveal these hid things he saith There be some among you who beleeve not when he saith Some he excepteth the Disciples On Cap. 10. He sheweth the sure tokens of a good Shepheard and of a Wolf ... and first of the pernicious Shepheard saying He entreth not by the dore that is by the Scriptures for he useth not the Scriptures and Prophets as witnesses for certainly the Scriptures are the dore by which we are brought unto God and these suffer not Wolves to enter for they forbid Hereticks that we may be secure and they give a reason of every thing therefore he is a theef who entreth not into the fold by the Scriptures and so is found by them .... Because the Scriptures are understood and opened by the Holy Spirit they do shew Christ unto us the Porter is justly expounded the Holy Spirit by whom as the Spirit of wisdom ann knowledge the Scriptures are opened and by them the Lord entreth to have a care of us and by them the Shepheard is known And the Sheep hear the voice of the Shepheard for because they had often called him a deceiver and they would through incredulity confirm this saying Doth any of the rulers beleeve in him Christ shews that they should not think him a deceiver though none of those beleeved in him but rather they should be cast out of the sheep-fold for saith he if I come in by the dore it is clear that I am the true Shepheard and ye which beleeve not in me seem not to be sheep On Cap. 12. speaking of the word Osanna he saith Out of these Texts any man may understand that the Scripture attributes salvation unto God only On Cap. 20. Though many signs of his resurrection were given yet these only are written and that not for ostentation or that the glory of the only begotten may be shewed but that ye may beleeve saith he What is the gain who reapeth it not Christ for what gain hath he that we beleeve But it redounds unto us for he saith That ye beleeving might have life through his name On Rom. 1. What righteousness can we have who are defiled with abomination and filthy deeds but God hath justified us not by our works but by faith On Cap. 3. If the Law had power to justifie what need had we of Christ If thou wilt say By what law is this glorying excluded is it by works seeing the Law commandeth He who doth these things shall live by them for these things did the Law of Moses command He saith Not but by the Law of faith which gives righteousness by grace and not by works You see how he calleth faith a law because this name was in such veneration amongst the Jews On Cap. 6. He calleth life grace and not a reward as if he had said Ye do not receive the reward of works but by grace are all these things given unto you through Christ which worketh and doth them all On Cap. 10. The righteousness of God is by faith which requires nothing glorious or grievous of us but all our hopes is on the grace of God On Cap. 11. If of works then no more of grace or else work were no more work if we be made acceptable unto God through works grace were superfluous but if grace be superfluous then must works also be taken away for where grace is working is not requisite and where working is no grace is required What then .... When he hath shewed what grace is and that it is the gift of God without the works of men he asserteth that the Israelites have not attained justification though they sought it because they sought it not rightly and they thought to have righteousness by works which could not be But saith he the election that is they which are chosen have attained it and by this word election he shews that the excellency of things to come and all other things are bestowed on men by the gift of God On Cap. 13 He the Apostle teacheth that all men whether a Priest or Monk or an Apostle should be subject unto Princes On Cap. 16. The Apostle teacheth that dissensions and scandals that is heresies are brought in by them which bring any doctrine besides the doctrine of the Apostles On 1 Cor. 3. Miracles are done very often for the profit of others and therefore are they done sometimes even by unworthy men Cap. 14. Signs are for unbeleevers for beleevers have no need of them seeing they do already beleeve ... but prophecies are profitable both to beleevers and unbeleevers ...... Behold how by degrees he proveth plainly that he who speaks with his tongue only and understands not doth the less good even to himself and this was the meaning of Basilius on this place ..... What then is more to be sought of God that we may pray in the Spirit that is with grace and with the mind that is with meditation to conceive what we should pray On 2 Cor. 4. That the excellency may be of the power of God and not of us that it may be clear saith the Apostle that the excellency of the
a disturber of the Christian Empire a sower of discord where peace was a most wicked man calling into question the Catholick faith a Necromancer infected with a Pythonical spirit c. For which crimes they declare him unworthy of the Roman See and unless he willingly leave the place they threaten him with an everlasting curse and they chose Gerebert or Wusbert Bishop of Ravenna to govern the Church him they call Clemens the III. Otho Frising and Pet. Mexia But think you that the Pope would obey No way Wherefore the Emperour made all speed with an Army towards Rome Mathildis hearing of his marching and fearing his power gave the Provinces of Liguria and Tuscia unto the Church of Rome Bellarm. de Rom. Pont. lib. 5. cap. 9. In the way the Emperour subdued her Lands and the Lands of the Marquess Esten and thereafter he came to Rome where An. Another Synod against the Pope 1083. thirty Bishops assembled in Councel and conclude against Gregory as they had done at Brixia and did subscribe the Decree The Romans stood up so long as the Pope abode with them but when he had brought them into the extreamest jeopardy he fled into Adrian's Tower and then the Gates of the City were set open but the Emperour would not enter untill a way was made for his Army thorow the Walls and Pope Clement was received into Saint Peters Gregory sent for Robert Guiscard the Norman Duke of Naples for aid and unto Mathildis but all in vain So he was glad to escape into Salerno where he died in exile and as may be read in Fascic rer expetend and in Matth. Paris and sundry others when he was sick before his Cardinals he bewailed his fault in his Pastoral charge and that by instinct of the Divel he had stirred up sedition and wars among men Benno testifieth that he sent this his Confession unto the Emperour and unto all the Church intreating that they would pray for pardon of his sins After his death and the death of them whom the Emperour had left Governours of the City the Romans set up Pope Urban the II. who insisting in the trace of his Predecessour did perswade the Emperour's eldest son Conrade the Father had left him Governour of Italy to take up Arms against his father and gave him in marriage Mathildis then the relict of the Duke of Naples He put Clemens from his Seat but when his father came against him Conrade was out-lawed with consent of all the Princes and the younger brother was declared heir of the Empire but first with an Oath given that during his fathers life he should not meddle with the Kingly power without his fathers consent Fascic rer Now many feared intestine Wars between the two brothers but Conrade died soon thereafter and Urban was made out of the way and the fore-named faction set up Paschalis the II. He would be inferiour unto the others in nothing and excommunicated the Emperour and dealt with his son though by nature and solemn Oath bound to the contrary to take the Scepter in his hand and bear himself as King rather then both his father and himself be dispossessed and suffer hazard by another The young man was inticed and The Son circumvenes the Father the Pope caused the Princes to elect Henry the V. Armies were levied by both parties and some skirmishes follow but the Father had the better yet seeing there could be no end of the Wars without ruining the Empire he consented unto a parley with his son who was advised to deceive his father by this means he came to him with feigned repentance the Father welcomed him as the Prodigal in the Gospel and dismissed the greatest part of his Army whereas his enemies gather at Mentz and appoint Binga for him to keep Christmas So soon as he was entred the City himself being the fourth person the gates were shut and all others were held out Then the son spoke fairly unto his father and promised all duty if the father would reconcile himself unto the Church The Father referred the whole matter unto the Diet of the Princes and they went together unto Mentz There at first the son said unto his Father Seeing the Bishops would admit no communion with him he would do well for peace sake to retire unto such a house near unto the place of the Diet and if he had refused he was able to force him But the Father doth it willingly and then the son kept him as in close prison permitting none to speak with him but his accustomed servants and he freely exerced the Imperial power untill the year 1106. In that Diet the Bishops of Alba and Constance the Pope's Legates spoke much against Henry the IV. for his simony and contumacy against the sentences of so many Popes and exhorted them all as obedient children to provide for the safety of their mother the Church by breaking the pride of one a contumacious person They all do consent to the deposition of the Emperour and they sent the Bishops of Mentz Colein and Worms to take the Imperial Ornaments from him against his will They declared unto him the sentence of the Diet. Henry asked For what cause had the Princes pronounced so severe Sentence against him before he was heard They answer For simony in bestowing Bishopricks and Abbocies He saith unto them one by one you Bishop of Mentz and you Bishop of Colein What have I got from you They answer Nothing Then saith the Emperour I thank God that in so far ye are honest men truly your Bishopricks might have brought much treasure into my Exchequer if I had sought it and my Lord of Worms knows neither is any of you ignorant whether I did advance you for gain or of meer favour wherefore I say unto you Fathers continue in loyalty I am now an old man and turn not Our glory into shame I appeal unto the general Court and if I must yeeld I will give the Crown unto my son with my own hands They refuse and speak menacingly Then he went aside and arayed himself with the Imperial Robes and returning saith These are the badges of my honour these hath the goodness of the eternal King and the election of the Princes bestowed on me and God is able to continue me in them and to restrain your hands from what you intend and We did not fear such violence nor have provided against it but if duty move you not stand in aw of God and if ye do not regard duty nor fear of God here We are and unable to resist violence The Bishops were astonished yet after a little pause they exhort one another they take the Crown off his head then draw him from his seat and pull off all his Royal Robes This was a Pastoral work The Emperour with deep groans saith The God of revenge look to it and avenge this iniquity of yours the like ignominy was never heard before I confess God is
in them all confirming the Decrees of his Master Gregory against the Emperour and against married Priests and strengthning the Laws for the Papal authority At last he was constrained to fly unto Claremount where he assembled a Councel under pretence of consulting for recovery of the Holy Land from the Turks An. 1094. of which it follows There he made many constitutions as The Church is pure in faith and free from all Secular power No Bishop Abbot or Clark shall accept any Ecclesiastical dignity from the hand of a Prince or any Laick Whosoever shall lay hands violently on or apprehend men of holy Orders or their servants shall be accursed Whosoever shall marry within the seventh degree of kindred shall be accursed c. Matth. Paris in Wilhel 2. There also he renewed the excommunication against the Emperour and against Pope Clement So one Pope at Rome and another Pope at Claremont had contrary Synods cursing one another burning one anothers Acts and abjuring their Consecrations Baptisms and Masses Nations and Cities were divided and some people espying the pride and vices of both the Popes did continue neutral and learned by lamentable experience that a Church can be ruled without a Pope When Popes and Bishops were taken up with bloody wars and tyrannical usurpations of Secular power what could the Sheep learn from such Pastours Urban did ordain that these words should be propounded unto all Intrants at their admission Wittingly and willingly I shall not communicate with them who are excommunicated by the Church of Rome likewise I shall not be present at the consecrations of them who accept Bishopricks or Abbeys from Laicks so may God help and these holy Evangelists as I shall never change from this sentence Platin. He did confirm the hours and Matins of Saint Mary saith Hec. Boet. lib. 12. cap. 12. And the Officium to be solemnly read on the Sabbath-day saith Fascic tempor Pol. Vergil de invent rer lib. 6. cap. 2. saith As Pelagius the II. ordained the Priests to keep the seven Canonical hours as a present remedy of mens weakness who fall seven times a day so Urban the II. ordained that so many hours should be kept to the honour of the Virgin The Arch-Bishop of Toledo covenanted with this Urban that he should make him Primat of Spain and therefore the other should indeavour to make all Spain Tributary unto Rome Before that time the Church of Spain was not subject unto Rome neither do we read of any Spanish Cardinals at Rome The Order of Cistersian and Carthusian Monks were about that time devised in Burgundy and confirmed by Urban After the Councel at Claremont he returned into Rome but with such authority that he was glad to lurk in the house of a Citizen Peter Leo the space of 2. years and died there in the 13. year of his Papacy and the year of our Lord 1099. To move the more men unto the expedition against the Turks and Sarazens he devised the first proclamation of indulgences or the full remission of all sins unto all that would go thither to deliver that holy Land as he said and the Sepulchre of Christ our Saviour from the power of the Mahumetans His Successours following this his example as it is easie to add unto things that are once devised did inlarge these indulgences to the benefit not only of them who went thither but unto every one which though they went not yet would contribute for the maintaining of Souldiers in that expedition Upon this account great sums of money were brought unto the Pope Thereafter these Indulgences were proclaimed unto all which would contribute unto the Wars against those which were called enemies of the Roman Church though they were Christians Under these colours vast sums were gathered from time to time although many times the money was imploied another way as followeth and God who brings light out of darkness made the same indulgences to be the occasion of Reformation CHAP. III. Of Divers Countries 1. IN the beginning of this Century were many prodigies as tokens of evils following Platin. signs in the Heavens above Earth-quakes below in the Sun darkness on earth Snakes were seen fighting against other Fountains were turned into blood the air was corrupt Ia. Vsser hath them at great length de success Eccles cap. 3. 4. Whereby some were moved to say Antichrist is come into the world Tho. Cooper ad An. 1099. In an assembly at Aken in the year 1016. were convened many both Princes and Bishops The Emperour Henry spoke of God's wrath hanging over their heads and advised them to think upon a way how these judgments might be turned off A Decree was made that all men should study to escape those judgments by fasting actions of piety and alms for say they the true doctrine of inward and saving repentance or of turning unto God as the consideration of sins that are committed against the ten commands of faith in Christ and the true and serious amendment of life hath been altogether obscured yea and buried by outward worship and human traditions therefore by publick authority of this Synod it is compounded that Priests attend more upon their Service all people give themselves unto fasting and Princes be more liberal in their Alms. Sigebert Crantz in Saxon. lib. 4. cap. 4. 2. The Fathers of the Primitive Church guessed that after a 1000. years from Christ's birth or passion or from the destruction of Jerusalem Antichrist should come and shortly after his appearing the world should have an end as Germanus Patriarch of Constantinople sheweth in Rer. Ecclesiast Theoria out of Theophilus Cyril Chrysostom c. And about the thousand years from Christ's nativity many men looked that it should come so to pass But when the thousand years were expired after the destruction of Jerusalem and they saw no such Antichrist as they had imagined neither did such things come to pass as they had conceived concerning the end of the World then as if they had been delivered from the danger thereof saith Baronius Annal. tom 11. they made fair buildings and Churches throughout the World especially in Italy and France Whereunto Ia. Vsser doth apply that saying of Henry Beware of Antichrist it is evil that the love of Churches hath overtaken you it is not well that ye reverence the buildings and walls of Churches ye conceive amiss of these is it any doubt that Antichrist shall sit in these The Mountains and Lakes and Woods are more safe unto me Likewise some made defection from the Faith and returned to Paganism as in the North parts Luitici Obotriti Vari c. So did Vilgard a Gramarian in Ravenna trusting to the apparitions of foul spirits in the likeness as they professed of Virgil Horace and Iuvenal when he began to vaunt foolishly of his knowledge of humanities they appeared unto him and gave him thanks for his love to their Books and promised to make him partner of their glory Thereafter he
began to profess that the Divinity of the Poets was true at last he was challenged and condemned by the Patriarch Peter But many in Italy Sardinia and in Spain followed the same impiety and were punished some with the sword and some with fire Rodolp Histo l. 2. c. 12. 3. Berno excellent in all learning was set over the Augianes anno 1008. he wrote many Books in Marc. Evang. sect 3. he saith In the holy Scriptures do hang the armor of our salvation Serm. de concor offic c. 5. Our weakness can do nothing without God as Lazarus could not rise by himself Serm. de ascend Dom. Christ is the head of the whole Church and all the elect are his members At that time lived Oecumenius and Olympiodorus two famous Greek writers Guthet Bishop of Prague was famous for learning and holiness and was put to death by the enemies of the faith Platin. in Benedict 8. and in Benedict 9. he saith Gerard a Venetian and Bishop of Hungary a good and learned man suffered martyrdom the Infidels tied him to the wheel of a Cart and let it run from the top of an high mountain so that he was all crushed yet he suffered it with joy 4. Fulbert Bishop of Charties or Carnatum was a learned man sundry Sermons and Treatises that are among the works of St. Augustine are said to be his He wrote an Epistle to Adeodatus wherein he first reproveth a gross opinion of some men who held that Baptism and the Eucharist were naked signs Then he proveth that these should not be considered as mere and outward signs but by faith according to the invisible vertue of mysteries The mystery of faith it is called saith he because it should be esteemed by faith and not by sight to be looked on as the spirit and minde and not as sight of body seeing onely by faith beholdeth the secret of this powerful mystery for what seemeth outwardly bread and wine now inwardly it is the body and blood of Christ we being encouraged by the authority of our true Master when we communicate of his body and blood we confess boldly that we are transfounded into his body and that he abideth in us Taste and see how savoury that meat is unless I be mistaken it tasteth like Angels food not that thou canst discern it with thy mouth but mayst taste it with thy inward affection open the mouth of faith enlarge the hope and the bowels of love and receive the bread of life even the food of the inward man from faith of the inward man proceedeth the tasting of the inward food while certainly by the infusion or preception of the gracious Eucharist Christ floweth into the bowels of the communicating soul when a godly soul receiveth into her chaste corners in that form wherewith she beholdeth him present with her under remembrance of the mystery and as the Spirit revealeth to wit as an infant lying in his mothers bosome or offered upon the alrar of the cross or lying in the grave or verily having trampled death under foot and rising again or carried high in glory above the heavens according to which forms Christ entreth into the acceptable habitation of the communicant and refresheth his soul with so many to speak so several blisses as are the ways that the eye of holy meditation can behold him neither let it seem a vain thing unto thee that we say that according to the beholding of a desirous soul Christ is found within the bowels of the communicant seeing thou art not ignorant that our fathers sojourned through the wilderness and were refreshed with Angels food to whom a fertile rain brought meat of one colour but of divers tastes and according to the appetite of every one it gave sundry delights of taste that whatsoever their appetit did covet the secret dispensation of the Giver did furnish the same to whom their gust gave what their eye could not see because it was one thing which was seen and another which was taken therefore wonder thou no more What Manna under the law did signifie by shadow the revealed verity of Christ's body layeth open in which body the divine Majesty condescendeth mercifully unto our weakness that with what sort of punishment mans body is punished he should taste the same in his body sensibly but God performeth this in the breast as he saith himself He who cometh of me shall live by me Now therefore the scruple or doubt is to be removed seeing he who is the Giver is a witness of the truth Then he illustrateth the same by comparison of a baptised man who albeit outwardly he be the same he was before yet inwardly he is another being made greater then himself by increase of invisible quantity that is of saving grace c. here is no word of substancial change of the elements the bread is still bread but we finde two other changes to wit the faithful are transfounded into the body of Christ and Christ is infounded into the habitation of a faithful soul yet so that Christ's body remaineth in the heavens and by the revelation of the Spirit faith beholdeth Christ present or lying in his mothers bosome and dying and rising and ascending and he entreth into the gracious habitation of a faithful communicant and refresheth him so many ways as is said Here also we see that the substance of bread remaineth as the substance of him who is baptised remaineth albeit inwardly he be another Biblioth part de le Bigne tom 3. 5. Berengarius Deacon of St. Maurice in Angiers was his disciple who hearing Math. Parisiensis calleth him Archiepisc Turonen a contrary error unto the former was broached in his days to wit that the bread of the Eucharist was the very body of Christ and the wine his blood substantially or properly Berengarius I say hearing this taught that the body of Christ is onely in the heavens and these elements are the Sacraments of his body and blood as followeth The occasion of this controversie at that time is written by Guitmund in his second book against Berengarius to wit when Lanfrank Abbot of Bec-heloin in Normandy was a boy in Italy it hapned that a priest as he saith saying Mass found very flesh upon the altar and very blood upon the chalice he burned to take them and immediately declared the matter unto the Bishop who assembling with moe Bishops ordained that that flesh and that chalice with the blood should be kept in that altar for ever as a most worshipful Relique From this deceiving Impostor many were moved to believe that the body and blood of Christ was present in the elements not onely sacramentally as the Fathers spake but substantially Berengarius wrote and preached against this Capernaitis error and therefore Adelman Bishop of Brixia wrote unto him In the beginning he saluteth him his holy and beloved Brother and condisciple under Fulbert Bishop of Carnatum Then he sheweth he heard it reported that Berengarius
they are letcherous in such a maner that they have not broken any bond of marriage Ibid. cap. 3. It is not possible that any of these whom God hath predestinated unto the Crown can lose their Crown it may be and it hath come to pass that some lose the Crown whom God hath called by a visible calling or which might have been heard by man Ibid. lib. 6. cap. 11. Excepting the Apostles whatsoever other thing afterwards is said let it be cut off neither have any authority therefore albeit after the Apostles there be any holy man how wise soever he be let him not have that authority seeing the Lord speaketh in the Scriptures Ibid. lib. 11. cap. 20. Possibly one will say Since Christ overcame death and ascended into the heavens doth he descend thence again surely he descendeth but invisibly all the world hath heard his descending when a sound was heard from heaven as of the Spirit coming and filled the house where they were sitting did not Christ then descend from heaven Is the substance or Majesty of the Son separated from the Spirit that when the holy Ghost descendeth the Son of God descendeth not also certainly he descendeth not in the form of his manhood yet undoubtedly he descendeth in his uncircumscribed Deity or in the Spirit that he giveth and he descendeth to visit the Nations by his Messengers whom he inspireth 9. Bernard in Epist 56. ad Gaufrid Episco Carnot writeth that Notbert Praemonstratensis did teach that Antichrist was before the doors and to be revealed in the same age Within these few days saith Bernard there I obtained to see this mans face and I learned many things from an heavenly fistule to wit from his mouth Behold what account this Author made of him who spake thus Hen. Oraeus in Nomenclat saith this Notbert was the beginner of the Order of Monks in the Diocy of Magdeburgh Pol. Vergil de inven rer lib. 7. cap. 3. calleth him a Priest of Lorrain and saith that he began that most exact Order after the rule of Augustinians as also in that Chapter and the preceeding he sheweth that sundry others seeing about that time that the Monastical institutions were not observed men becoming always worse and worse and godliness was corrupted by riches quae pietas ut mater illas à principio Ordini pepererat quotidie sunt qui ignaviae suae potius quàm religioni consulant therefore they would reform the Order and added some new Rites for distinction from others of the same Order who were become looser and by these means the number of Orders were multiplied 10. Theodoricus Abbot of St. Trudo at Leodium about the year 1120. said Simon Magus now reigneth at Rome and not Simon Peter and Simony is in place of the Gospel what may we not have if we have money In Catal. test verit lib. 14. are some of his verses concerning the Government of the Church he saith Vt Mopso Nisa corvo datur ec●e columba Qualis pullus erit quem fert commixtio talis Hence it appeareth that good men at that time bewailed the wretched condition of the Church 11. Hugo de S. Victore by Nation a Saxon and Abbot of S. Victor at Paris was in great account about the year 1130. His works are extant in three Tomes In one place he saith The Clerks of our time know not the Law nor learn they it but they study vanity ease surfeiting and drunkenness they are often in the streets seldom in the Churches slow to search the faults of sinners and ready to follow the trace of hares they give more bread to dogs then to the poor their beds are better arayed then the altars the barking of dogs and lowing of oxen is more pleasant unto God then the singing of such Clerks their preaching may be dispised whose life is contemned Of our communion with Christ he saith on Iohn 6. The Lord shewing a difference betwixt the bread he gave and which they did eat in the wilderness saith I am the bread of life for he is the bread wherewith an hungry soul is refreshed which is when true faith embraceth him for by faith we love him and by love we are united unto Christ which is our life therefore this spiritual bread is eaten by faith even without Sacramental eating and is profitable unto salvation dayly we have need of this bread while this present life endureth and so said Augustine Why preparest thou thy teeth and stomach believe and thou hast eaten On Chapter 20. he saith Whose sins ye forgive i. e. whose sins are forgiven by you God also forgiveth them this is spoken generally not onely unto the Apostles as some say this is the prerogative of the Apostles but it is spoken and granted unto all their successors On Rom. 3. The written Law is called the Law of works because men under the Law thought that all their righteousness was in the works of the Law but the Law of Faith and Grace is so called because men under Grace set the sum and efficacy of their salvation on Grace onely knowing that as no man is saved by righteousness of his works so none is justified by works of his righteousness for righteousness is not of good works but good works are of righteousness On Chapter 4. If man had not sinned he should have had perfect righteousness which consisteth in the perfect fulfilling of God's commands so that he should have had no lust against reason and he might have loved God with all his heart but after sin and for sin man cannot have this perfect righteousness unto which eternal life is justly due but God of his grace giveth faith unto man and of the same grace reputeth it for that perfection as if he had the perfection of righteousness De Scriptura Scriptor Sacris cap. 1. he saith That Scripture onely is truly called Divine which was from the Spirit of God and written by those who spoke by God's Spirit that maketh a man divine and reformeth him according to the image of God by teaching to know him and by exhorting to love him whatsoever is taught therein is truth whatsoever is commanded is good and whatsoever is promised is blessedness for God is truth without falshood goodness without wickedness and blessedness without misery In cap. 6 7. All Divine Scripture is contained in the Old and New Testaments and when he hath divided the Old Testament into the Law Prophets and Hagiographa and hath reckoned the Books that are in the Hebrew Canon he addeth There be also other Books as Wisdom the Books of Syracides Judith Tobias and the Maccabees that are read indeed but are not rolled in the Canon Catol test ver lib. 15. Likewise De Sacramentis fidei lib. 1. cap. 28. If it be asked What is original sin in us It is a corruption or vice by which in our birth we draw ignorance in our minde and concupiscence in the flesh And cap. 19. In the
have the investiture of the Sacrament note of the Lord 's precious body and blood for that Sacrament worketh two things in us it diminisheth the feeling in the smaller sins and taketh away the consent in the more grievous If now any of you do not feel so oft so bitter motions of wrath envy letchery and such others let him give thanks unto the body and blood of our Lord because the vertue of the Sacrament worketh in him and he should rejoyce that the wretched ulcer is like to be healed But what shall we do seeing so long as we are in this body of sin and in this evil time we cannot be without sin shall we despair God forbid Blessed John saith If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us but if we confess our sins God is faithful to In many things we all offend yet none should dispise or think little of that for it is impossible to be saved with these and it is impossible they can be washed away but by Jesus Christ and unless he wash them I say therefore let none be perniciously careless and use the words of wickedness to excuse his sins for as he said unto Peter unless Christ shall wash them away we shall have no part with him and yet we should not for them be too solicitous he will forgive as readily and gladly if we acknowledge what we are for in such sins as inevitable both immoderate fear and carelesness is worthy of blame hence it is that he hath taught us to pray dayly for the forgiveness of sins for as I said of lust he hath taken away the damnation of it as the Apostle saith There is no damnation unto them that are in Christ nevertheless for to humble us he suffereth it to live in us and to afflict us grievously that we may know what grace doth unto us and that we should always run unto him for help so doth he with us in these lesser sins by a pious dispensation that they are not altogether taken away but by them God will teach us that seeing we cannot shun these lesser things we might be sure we do not overcome greater sins by our own strength and so we should be ever in fear and watchful that we lose not his grace which we see to be so many ways necessary unto us Super. Cant. Serm. 13. Hearken what God saith My glory I will not give unto another Lord what wilt thou give unto us he saith Peace I give unto you peace I leave unto you It is enough for me I take it thankfully what thou leavest and I leave what thou reservest so I am content and I doubt not but it is for my advantage I do altogether abjure glory lest if I do usurp what is not given I do miss that which is offered and lose it justly peace I would have and I desire no more he who is not content with peace is not content with thee for thou art our peace who hast made both one this is necessary this is enough to be reconciled with thee and to be reconciled with thy self for since I became an adversary unto thee I have been grievous unto my self and now I am more wary and I would not be ingrate for the benefit of peace which thou givest nor a sacrilegious usurper of thy glory unto thee Lord unto thee be glory wholly happy am I if I have peace Serm. 14. The Law which never brought any man to perfection is a yoke that neither they nor their fathers could ever bear but the Synagogue is strong and careth not for a light burthen nor a sweet yoke she is whole needeth not a physician and trusteth in the Law Ser. 22. Whosoever being grieved for his sins hungreth and thirsteth for righteousness let him believe in thee who justifiest the ungodly and being justified by onely faith he hath peace with God Ser. 61. Confidently will I take what I have need of out of the bowels of the Lord they abound in mercy the piercing nail is unto me an opening key that I may see the Lord's will why should I not see through these holes the nails cry the wounds cry that verily God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself therefore the mercy of the Lord is my merit I shall not have need of merits so long as he wanteth not merits and if the mercies of the Lord be manifold I have merit enough Shall I sing of thy righteousness Lord I will mention thy righteousness only for it is also mine seeing that thou wast made even of God to be righteousness unto me Shall I fear that it be not sufficient for us both it is not a short mantle the righteousness of the Lord endureth for ever What is longer then eternity it will cover both thee and me sufficiently it is a large and eternal righteousness and indeed in me it will cover a multitude of sins but in thee Lord what will it cover but treasures of piety and riches of bountifulness Ser. 62. The vine of the Lord is the Church of them who are predestinated Ser. 63. What is so powerful to heal the wounds of conscience and to purge the sight of the minde as the frequent meditation of Christ's wounds Ser. 65. By the vine I mean her which filleth the earth whereof we are a portion that large vine planted by the Lord's hand redeemed by his blood watered with his word propagated by his grace and made fertile by his Spirit Ser. 66. The Spirit saith manifestly that in the last days some shall depart from the faith giving heed unto the spirits of errors and doctrines of divels certainly he speaketh of these men now for they forbid to marry and abstain from meat which God hath created but see now whether this be not properly the craft of the divel and not of men as the Spirit hath foretold Ask the Author of that Sect they can give you none What Heresie hath not a principal Author among men the Manichees had Manes each of these pests had their master from whom they had their beginning and name but what name or title will ye give these none because that Heresie is not from men and yet we will not say that it is by the revelation of Christ but rather and without doubt as the Spirit hath fortold by the fraud of divels speaking lyes in hypocrisie and forbidding to marry certainly they speak so in hypocrisie and guile of the fox faining that they do it for love of chastity which they have devised to increase and multiply filthiness The matter is so plain that I admire how a Christian could ever be perswaded thereunto except they are so beastly that they could not perceive how he that condemneth marriage looseth the bridle unto all uncleanness or certainly they are so full of wickedness and divelish malice that though they know it yet they dissemble and rejoyce in the destruction of men Take away
things of the world that the Prince of this world may not finde any thing that is his in thee c. He did oft call the Clergy Syria Edom the calves of Bethel Idols of Egypt Priests of Baal c. In his other Epistles he saith If thou hadst once tasted the sweetness of wisdom i. e. of the holy Scripture thou wouldest loath all other things in comparison for this giveth abundantly the incomparable treasures of pleasure and the grace of all gifts And again It is necessary to read the Scriptures for that is the table of the tabernacle that is the food by which we breath and live Certainly Christ did use the onely testimony of the word against all the tentations of Satan in the wilderness if therefore an host should come against you guard your self with the buckler of a good conscience and with the sword of the Spirit Again The exhortation of man without the grace of God is but as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal he onely can give a mouth and wisdom which saith Without me you can do nothing Lord take thou away my stony heart and give a new humble contrite and a heart of flesh In the last of his Epistles he reckoneth the Books of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Esdras III. and IV. Judeth Tobias Maccabees among the Apocrypha Catol test ver lib. 14. 10. Richard de St. Victor a Scot was held for a learned and good man about the year 1140. He wrote much On Cant. c. 2. The reading and meditation of the Scriptures do strengthen the minde and weaken the enemy so long as they keep this in minde and do it they are hereby most expert to encounter with the enemy De statu hom inter cap. 12. How justly is fr●ewill said to be dead seeing by it self it is never moved unto any good for what good can it do of it self seeing it cannot say Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost and indeed it is often moved unto good but never accept by the holy Ghost De sacrif Abrah Mariae If the grace and protection of God be withheld man is thrown down at every suggestion of the enemy and into whatsoever evil and being once thrown down he can never rise by his own power A man can bring forth no bud of good work of himself without working grace and when he hath begun to work he can no way continue without its cooperation Par. 2. in explanat aliquot locor Apost The Law teacheth onely what we should do and addeth not how we may obey and therefore it can justifie none the Gospel teacheth what should be done how it may be done and how that which is not done may be supplied In Apocaly lib. 3. Onely that prayer is acceptable in heaven which the Son offereth unto the Father Catol test ver lib 15. He was the first which taught that the Virgin Mary was born without original sin Io. Maior in gest Scot. lib. 3. cap. 12. 11. Malcolm IV. King of Scots did command Roger Arch-Bishop of The Pope's Legate is forbidden to come into Scotland York and Roman Legate to depart out of the Realm and said It was not reason that the Land should be oppressed by ungodly men bearing glorious names He. Boet. Hist lib. 13. Again in the year 1188. Pope Clement sent another and he had not better success for all did refuse him except John Bishop of St. Andrews and therefore he was banished and he had refuge unto the Pope who by and by sent unto Henry King of England and gave unto him the right of the Crown of Scotland Io. Bale Cent. 3. § 26. in Appen 12. It is recorded that one Fulco came and said unto the English King King Richard's three daughters Richard with great boldness O King thou hast three very bad daughters take good heed unto them and provide unto them good husbands lest by inconvenient bestowing of them thou run not into damage onely but utter perdition unto thy self The King said Thou art mad foolish hypocrite I have no daughter Fulco replieth I do not lye O mighty King for you have three daughters continually in your Court and wholly possess your person and such whores are they that the like hath not been heard I mean mischievous pride greedy covetousness and filthy letchery therefore I say again beware of them and out of hand provide marriages for them The King then took his words in good part by and by calling his Nobles declared unto them them the words of Fulco whose counsel said he I intend to follow not doubting of your consents my Lords thereunto wherefore here before you all I give my eldest daughter swelling pride to wife unto the proud Templars my greedy daughter avarice unto the Cistertian Monks and filthy luxury unto the riotous Prelates of the Church so severally agreeing with all their natures that the like match is not to be found unto them This was about the year 1198. saith I. Fox in Act. 13. Here it shall not be amiss to remember the example of Simon Thurvey Simon Thurvey an English man of Cornwal for a warning to temerarious Students He was a subtil Logician and expert in all Liberal Sciences he left his own Countrey and was a Doctor in Paris many years and trusting to his Philosophy he vaunted that he knew all Christ's Law and by force of disputation he could disprove it all on a suddain he became forgetful of all learning and could not say the Lord's Prayer nor knew the a b c. Mat. Paris reporteth that when he was writing his History Nicola epi. Danelm told him this and had seen this Simon learning to read from his own bastard son as if he had been a childe of six years onely 14. King William went into England to congratulate the safe arrival of Richard from Judea in the year 1199. at that time Harald Earl of Orknay and Caitnes took the Bishop of the Countrey prisoner because he had stopped some suit he had demanded of the King and bereft him of his eyes and tongue William at his returning would revenge this inhumanity and Harald would defend himself by force but his forces were scattered and he was apprehended it was done unto him by the hangman as he had unto the Bishop and then strangled all his male-children were gelded and many of his friends as accessories were fined in money Buchan lib. 7. When this was reported unto Pope Innocentius III. he sent his Legate John Cardinal de monte Celio with a sword richly set with precious stones a purple hat in form of a diadem and a Bull of large priviledges exempting the Church of Scotland from all censures except onely of the Pope or Legate sent by the Conclave the Bull was dated in the year 1209. H. Boeth Hist lib. 13. cap. 8. THE FOURTH AGE Of the CHURCH OR The History of the Church lurking and of Anti-Christ reigning containing the space of 300. years from the year
words If it be lawful to celebrate for a penny it were far better and precious to celebrate without pennies this they say thinking that simony is committed in these exactions Oh how great a wickedness and madness to exact forty fifty or sixty florens for the absolution of a City and relaxation of a Church-yard I am silent of other things simple and secular people do abhor all these things 28. Jagielo Duke of Lituania was married to Heduigis Queen of Poland The conversion of Lituania An. 1386. with condition that he should embrace the Christian faith and annex that Dukedom to the Crown of Poland he and his three Brothers Borissus Suidrigielo and Vidold were baptized at Cracow Febr. 14. The next year he called a general convention of all the people of Lituania at Vilna in the beginning of Lent and took with him the Bishop of Gesna and some Priests There he propoundeth unto them the forsaking of their Idolatry and the embracing the Christian Religion he allured them with exhortations and promises but the Priests being ignorant of the language could teach them nothing at all The barbarous people were loath to leave the customs of their Ancestors but when they saw that at commandment of the King the fire in the Temple of Vilna to be extinguished and the Altar broken and the Serpents which they had worshipped to be killed and dead and their holy groves destroyed without the hurt of any man the people wondered and said How is it that our gods do not revenge themselves on these wicked Christians if any of us had done the like we had perished by the wrath of the gods Then were they willing to follow the Religion of their Prince and because it had been wearisome to baptize them all this honor was given to some of the Nobles to baptize them severally and the vulgar sort were set in companies and the Priests cast water upon them and gave unto every company a name saying I baptize ye in the name c. and so in one day 30000 barbarous people were baptized Ale Guaguin in Rer. Polon To. 1. 29. Nicolaus de Lyra a Jew by birth and then a converted Christian wrote Annotations on all the Bible which were in great account among the School-men but in many Articles of faith he differeth from the Papists now as appeareth clearly by these passages When Jerome had written in Prologin lib. Tobiae The book of Tobiah which the Jews following the catalogue of divine Scriptures have reckoned among those which they call Hagiographa de Lyra saith He should rather have said among the Apocrypha or he taketh the Hagiographa largely And in his Postilla he saith When I have written as God hath helped upon all the Canonical books of the holy Scriptures ..... trusting in his help I intend to write of the other books which are not of the Canon to wit the book of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Judith Tobias and the books of Maccabees ...... We must know that the books of the sacred Scriptures which are called Canonical are of such authority that whatever is written there it is held true without controversie and consequential also what is manifestly concluded thereupon for as in the writings of Philosophers truth is known by reducing unto the first principles that are known in themselves so in the Scriptures of Catholick Doctors truth is known in so far as things to be believed can be reduced unto the Canonical writings of the sacred Scripture which we have by revelation from God who cannot lye therfore the knowledg of these writings is necessary unto the Church for which cause of the exposition of them it may be said what is written Eccles 24. All these are the book of life that is all the books that are expounded in the preceding work are contained in the book of life that is in the books of truth revealed by God who is life for as divine predestination is called the book of life so this Scripture revealed by God is called the book of life both because it is from him which is life essentially as is said and it leadeth unto the blessed life And next it is to be considered that the books which are not of the Canon are received to be read by the Church for information of manners but their authority is not such that they are thought sufficient to prove things in controversie as Jerome teacheth in the Prologue on Judith c. On Deut. 17. at the words Thou shalt not decline he saith Here an Hebrew Glossa saith If he say unto thee The right hand is the left hand or the left is the right thou must receive such a sentence But this is manifestly false since the sentence of no man of whatsoever authority is to be received if it be manifestly false or erroneous and this is clear by what is said in the text They shall judge unto thee the truth of judgement and they shall teach thee according to his law Hence it is clear that if they speak false or decline from God's Law manifestly they should not be heard On Psal 124. or rather 125. on these words Like mount Sion he saith because as mount Sion is unmoveable so they who trust in the Lord are not moved from the stability of faith therefore it followeth shall not be moved for ever to wit who dwell in the spiritual Jerusalem by faith formed by love And the cause of this stability followeth The mountains are about it that is the Angels are deputed to keep the Church and the Lord is round about his people as he saith in Matth. ult Behold I am with you unto the end of the world On Daniel at the last words he saith The last two Chapters to wit of Susanna and the History of Bell and Dragon are not of the Canon therefore now I leave them and intend to take in hand the other books which are Canonical On Matth. 1. at the words Iudah begot Phares he rehearseth an opinion of Jerome which he confuteth and he addeth a general reason saying The sayings of Saints are not of such authority but we may think the contrary in those things which are not determined by the sacred Scripture therefore Augustine in Epist ad Vincent saith of the writings of the Saints This sort of writings is to be distinguished from the Canonical Scriptures and testimonies are not brought from them so that we may not think the contrary On chap. 10. at the words He gave them power over unclean spirits he saith If it be asked Why Preachers do not such miracles now Gregory answereth Because when the Catholick faith is sufficiently proved by the miracles of Christ and his Apostles it is needless to reiterate such proof any more And a little after Ye have received freely to wit grace which God hath bestowed on you whether grace making acceptable or grace which is freely given Give it freely even as ye have received for for spiritual acts as for administration
doctrine and in the end he saith the Holy Scriptures of both Testaments are to be revised and corrected according to the antient Copies of the first Originals that they may be purged from the errours which have crept-in by the carelesness of Writers or default of times Solemn ceremonies concerning which some broils have been antiently are to be brought into some allouwable order and true histories are to be distinguished from Apocryphe fables c. Orat. Io. Pici in Concil Lateran ex Fascic rer expetend 12. Jacobus Faber Stapulensis had then renown for his learning and knowledge in all sciences especially in Divinity Aventinus had been his disciple and testifieth that he heard him and Clichtoveus say sixe hundred times that Lombard had troubled the most clear fountain of Divine philosophy with the durt of questions and pudlle of opinions He wrote Commentaries on the Psalmes Ecclesiastes on the four Evangels and the epistes of Paul His works began to be printed An. 1508 and as Jo. Sleidan writes he suffered many grievous persecutions by the Masters of Paris but the King by his missives from Spain exhorted them to spare him What was his belief in many articles now in controversy may be guessed by this that the Authors of the Belgick Jndex Expurgatorius have filled 18 pages with the catalogue of passages which they have ordained to be blotted out of his books as out of his Comm. on Mathew they blot out these words By faith in Christ only wee look for salvation The righteousness of works is a Pharisaicall doctrine Let none say Peter was that rocke And on Luke The grace ofsalvation is due not to works but of the goodnes of God only In very deed not priests but God doth cleanse yet they are witnesses All prayer and adoration belongs unto Him alone And on Iohn This faith can not bee without love He fell down and worshipped which is a duty to be done unto God only and the duty of him which confesseth that the Son of God is God All the Saints are nothing if the question be of true worship Yee believe in God believe also in mee Or els he is but an infidell albeit he think that he believes But the Authors of the Spanish Index have made a shorter cut they order to destroy all the Commentary on John because it can not be wel amended say they 13. William Budaeus was Secretary to Francis I King of France in his fifth book de Asse which was printed An. 1513. he describes the estate of the Church at that time saying The clergy are worse than the worst of the people in all kind of vice and wantonness prelats are ignorant and enemies of learning having no respect to the salvation of souls but rather thrusting them down to hell by their false teaching or wicked example He saw how they sought to abolish the Pragmatica Sanctio and therefore when he hath shewed that the riches of the present times are not comparable unto the former times he addeth except one sort of men who indeed should not have been excepted these are the priests whom now we behold to be the only rich men almost next unto Kings And when he had spoken a little satyrically of them he addeth Whence hast thou o France that liberty to be called most Christian if as by religion thou didst deserve that honourable name so by the same religion thou endevoirest not to retain it still O how would thy enemies clap their hands and rejoice who do envy thee this Palladium of thy happines Kingdom a gift sent unto thee from heaven which being taken away or fading from thee thou canst no more be happy Beware I pray thee that thou bee not to credulous unto these sonnes of the earth who building honorable estates like unto the Aloidae seeme to make warre against God climbe into the heavens to wrong them who are above for by consent of all men the cause of all these cometh from the head top of Christendom who unless he be well disposed all the inferiour members must draw the causes of disease from him We see likewise that godly men do wish that by providence the pillar of the Church may be amended or another be sett up more profitable Neither am I ignorant that the foundations of this house were layd by a cunning hand on a most firme rock which by no force can be pulled down c. Then he sheweth the abuses of the Church especially those that proceed from simony whereby the government of the Church is altogether diverse from the institution of Christ He compareth Christ his Apostles with the Pope and his court so that he is compelled to say The Bride hath renounced her Spouse Then he complaines that the discipline of the Church is corrupted by them who should have been the chief maintainers of it and who can believe that the men who have done these things can acknowledge the good true faith who knoweth not that the choice stones of the sanctuary have been castdoun long since and dispersed so that the Majesty of the Church being ruined now the Spouse of Christ forgetting her marriage-bond not only hath left her husband but shamelesly hath been wandring in the broad waies streets licenciously gone a whooring thorough Provinces who knoweth not that the sheapherds are become not only deserters but drivers away of their flockes What Have we not seen the most eminent of the praelats behaving themselves so preposterously so filthily that they who should have framed all the daunce to grauity comelynes have altogether abhorred the comelynes of order c. The Jesuits of the Spanish Jndex Expurg have ordained all such passages to be blotted out In his secound book De Translat Hellenism he saith O if we had but the relicqus and ashes of the old faith which now is almost buried From which faith God hath called some of his stewards faith full who being full of Divine courage of godly emulation of the Spirit of God have been a glory ornament of the Church But now and even of a long tyme the Church is a wasted house having no colour nor shew of that religion which Christ taught if we judge of the universality by the greatest part 14. Iacohus Almainus Doctour of Divinity in his book printed at Colen De potestate Pontificis against Thomas de vio aliàs Cardinal Cajetan the Legate of Leo X. writeth particularly of indulgences saying The power of binding loosing seemeth not to be extended unto them that are in purgatory seing wheresoever promises are made in the Scriptures or grace is promised it is alwayes said on earth as whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth c. and it is never spoken of these who are departed this lofe Thence it followeth saith he That the souls in purgatory can not be delivered from punishment by indulgences albeit they may be by prayers 15. John Tritemius was at this time Abbas Spanhemiensis
he had many bickerings with the monkes In one epistle he calleth the priests contemners of the Holy Scriptures in another he complaineth that Aristotle was more preached in pulpits then Christ In his answer unto the 8. questions of the Emperour Maximilian he hath these propositions If there be any salvation without Christ Christ is not the Saviour of all 2. Seing the Sacred Scripture is the work of God we must necessarily confesse it is in all respects perfect for the great God whose works are all perfect hath given unto his Scriptures such order as he pleased and without all doubt he inspired his pen men how they should write Adquaest 4. 3. The heavenly doctrine is not in the words but in the meaning of the Scriptures not in the pages of an hid oration but in the secret of mysticall inspiration ibid. 4. Neither hath the Church any authority without the Scripture nor is faith given unto the Scripture without the Church for as Augustin saith I had not believed the Scriptures if the authority of the Church had not moved me So John Gerson said I would not believe the Church if the Gospell did not move me the Church confirmeth the Scripture and is confirmed by the Scripture when the Church doubteth she hath recourse unto the advice of the Scriptures for the same Spirit of God hath founded the Church on the faith of Jesus Christ and he only hath inspired the Scriptures This is the three fold cord which is not easily broken when the Holy Scripture is by the Holy Spirit coupled with the authority of the Church so that the Scriptures commend the Church and the Church commendeth the Scripture 5. Some men think that the Holy Scripture is in many things confused and imperfect and yet if they would read it with due purity of mind they would find it very perfect solid At last he concludeth The authority of any Catholik Church not of any particular Church is great which only in the doubts concerning faith hath place to expound the Scriptures to wit out of the Scriptures themselves which are perfect as he said before unto whom speaking according to the Scriptures the neckes of all powers are subject c An. 1516. died the worthy Carmelite Baptista Mantuanus a Poet of such same that he is aequalized unto the antient Poets as Bostius writeth unto Burellus In many places he describeth the estate of Rome to wit he professeth his own affection toward that Church in Fast. lib. 12. saying Et licet his olim nugis juveniliter aures Praebuerim tamen ut melius cum tempore factum Judicium lis haec mihi perniciosa videri Caepit ex gravium cuneis abigenda virorum In his Eclog. 9. he describeth the City thus Mille lupi totidem vulpes in vallibus istis Lustra tenent quod dirum ac mirabile dictu est Ipse homines hujus tanta est violentia coeli Saepe lupi effigiem moresque assumere vidi Inque suum saevire gregem multâque madere Caede sui pecoris factum vicinia ridet Nec scelus exhorret nec talibus obviat ausis Saepe etiam miris apparent monstra figuris Quae tellus affecta malis influxibus edit Saepe canes tantam in rabiem vertuntur ut ipsos Vincant caede lupos qui tutela fuerunt Hostiles i●eunt animos ovilia mactant And in his first book Sylvarum after along catalogue of the impieties of Rome he saith Singula texentem convitia deseret aetas Tantum ac tale tuae est impietatis onus Romanis Pater est Mavors lupa Martia nutrix Haec hominum mores ingeniumque docent Vivere qui sanctè cupitis discedite Romae Omnia cùm liceant non licet esse pium And in Fast. libr. 2. he directeth his speech unto Pope Leo X. Sed tria praesertim restant curâ atque labore Digna tuo bellum est primum quae fessa laborat Italia pleni humano jam sangnine campi Est aliud Romana gravi maculata veneno Curia quae spargit terras contagia in omnes Postremum est oppressafides expósta rapinis Vndique in praedam populis subjecta cruentis A te haec subsidium magnis clamoribus orant Sancte Pater succurre Leo Respublica Christi Labitur agrotatque fides jam proxima morti 17. The University of Padua in their determination for the divorcement of Augustinus Furnarius a Noble man of Genua did hold that those things which appertain unto the law of God are not subject unto the power of the Romish Pope and that in these things the Pope is not the Vicar of Christ but only in such things that are committed unto the jurisdiction of men Corn. Agrippa in Apolog. § 2. 18. Cornelius Agrippa Count a Niettesheim Doctor utriusque Juris became afterwards counseller unto Charls V. Emperour Albeit he continue professing himself to be a member of the Romish Church and wrote despitefully of Martin Luther yet in sundry of his works he dissembleth not the estate of the Romish Church An. 1510. he had a declamation against diverse abuses of the Church and in defence of his declamation he wrote a book which he calleth De vanitate scientiarum artium in which his purpose is to shew that no where no not in the Pope nor in Scholastik Theology is there any Divine solidity but only in the word of God and in proof heer of as he taxeth the faults of all studies and Arts so he concealeth not the vices of priests monks Bishops Cardinals and Popes as elsewhere I have touched especially in cap. 54. he sheweth that the Doctours of Theology in Lovan do reckon among the canonized Saints Aristoteles who by killing himself had made himself a sacrifice unto the Devils and nevertheless they had caused to print a book de Salute Aristot and they had published another booke de Vita Morte Arist with a Theologicall glosse in the end of which they conclude as John the Baptist was the fore-runner of Christ in things concerning grace so Aristotle was the forerunner of Christ in other things c. In c. 60. he saith It is not the least part of Religion that consisteth in the pompe of ceremonies in cloaths in vessell candles bell organs concents odours sacrifices gestures pictures in the choise of meates fastes such other things that are in singular admiration adoration of the unlearned people who receive and take heed only to such things as are before their eyes But as it oft happeneth that those things which are ordained for remedy turne to harme so it comes to passe that by the multiplication of the lawes concerning these caeremonies Christians are now burdened with too many constitutions with moe that the Iewes of old and which is more to be lamented whereas those rites are neither good nor bad in themselves people trust more in them and observe them more praecisely than the commandements of God
and there entred into the monastery of the Augustinians After three years he was inuited to be professour of Philosophy in Witembergh and there he was graduat Doctour of Divinity by Andr. Catolstadius An. 1512. In Erford he had learned of an old Augustinian that it is not sufficient to believe generally the remission of sin or that it belongs unto them only whose names are registred in Scriptures but every true penitent may believe that his own sins are forgiven him freely in Christ and accordingly is that to be understood Wee are justified by faith freely Afterwards he read the works of Augustin and despised not the Sententiaries namely Thomas Biel Occam c. In the year 1516. he had a publick disputation of Free-will against the common doctrine of the School-men as Lu. Osiand in Epit. hist cent 16. li. 1. c. 19. rehearseth His Question was Whether man being created after the image of God can by his naturall power keep the commands of God the creator or do or think any good and by grace deserve and know his merites Hee answereth in three Conclusions and so many Corollaries unto each of them Conclu I Man in respect of his soul made to the image of God and so fitted for the grace of God doth by his naturall strength only make every creature which he useth subject to vanity and seeketh himself and things according to the flesh Corollar 1. The old man is vanity of vanities altogether vanity and makes all creatures even which are good to be vain Coroll II. The old man is called flesh not only because he is led with sensuall concupiscence but albeit he be chast wise just because he is not renewed of God by the Spirit Corol. 3. Albeit all unbelievers be vain and do no good yet they shall not all suffer alike punnishment Conclus 2. A man without Gods grace can no way keep his commandements nor prepare himself unto grace vel de congruo vel de condigno but necessarily abides under sin Goroll 1. The will of man without grace is not free but serveth albeit not unwillingly Cor. 2. When a man doeth what is in himself he sinneth seeing of himself he can neither will nor think well Cor 3. Seing the righteousnes of believers is hid in God and their sin is manifest in themselves it is true that only the un just are damned and sinners whoores are saved Conclus III. Grace or charity which helpeth not but in extream necessity is very dull or rather no charity unless by extream necessity be understood not the perrill of death but every one's want Coroll 1. Christ Jesus our strength our righteousnes the searcher of the hearts and reines is the only searcher and judge of our merites Cor. 2. Seing unto a believer all things by the power of Christ are possible it is superstitious to depute other helps unto mans will or of other Saints Cor. 3. According to the premisses is the answer unto the Question He wrote unto an Eremite thus I desire to know what thy soul doeth whether now in the end it be weary of it's righteousness and learneth to be refreshed with and trust in the righteousness of Christ for in our time the tentation of presumption is strong in many and chiefly in those who study to be just and good by their own strength and being ignorant of the righteousness of God which is in Christ abundantly and is given freely seek by themselves to do well so long untill they have confidence to stand before God as it were adorned by their own strength and merites which is impossible Thou wast some time in this opinion or errour and so was I but now I fight against this errour but as yet have not overcome therefore dear brother learne Christ and him crucified learne to sing unto Him and despairing of thyself to say unto him Thou Lord Jesus art my righteousness but I am thy sin thou hast taken mine and hast given mee thine thou hast taken what thou wast not and hast given mee what I was not Take heed lest at any time thou aspire unto so great purity that thou wouldst not seem to thy self a sinner yea or not to be a sinner for Christ dwelleth not but in sinners for therefore came he down from heaven where he dwelt among the righteous that he might dwell in sinners Think upon that his love and thou shalt see his most sweet consolation For if we must come by our labours and afflictions to the peace of conscience why hath he died therefore thou canst not finde peace but by him and by fiduciall despairing of thyself and thy works and further thou shalt learne thereby that as he hath taken thee and made thy sins his so hath he made his righteousness thine Howbeit Luther had so disputed and written yet none did oppose him but rather he purchased love and estimation 3. When the Indulgences were proclaimed and preached in the manner Luthers first assault named before his zeal could not endure the vanity of them and the blasphemies wherewith they were commended At the first he spoke not against the use of indulgences but against the abuses of them and against the blasphemous commending of them and as he shewes in his Apology which is in Sleidan lib. 13 he wrote unto the Bishop of Mentz exhorting him humbly to inhibite or restrain these Friers but the Bishop returned him no answer yet the Bishop of Brandenburgh hearing of that epistle did admonish Luther to take heed lest he brought himself into danger Likewise Alb. Crantzius the historian said unto him Brother you speak truth but you can not help it go into your cell and pray Lord have mercy upon us And the Prior and subprior of Wittembergh did entreat him that for respect unto their Order he would be silent and not bring it into contempt and the rather that the Franciscanes were beginning to rejoice that the Augustinians were falling into contempt even as they Luther answereth All this will fall if it be not begun in the name of the Lord but if it bee let us trust to God that he will carry it on Schultet Annal. ad An. 1517. John Bishop of Misna at that time said he had lately read the holy Scriptures and therein had found a religion very unlike unto that that was presently professed And a litle before his death he heard of Tecelius and said This will be the last seller of such wares for intollerable is his impudence Ibid. A rich woman of Magdeburgh after confession could not have a pardon from a Dominican unless she would give a hundred florenes she adviseth with a Franciscan her former Confessour and he said unto her God forgives sin freely and selleth not as a merchant And he besought her that she would not tell Tecelins who had informed her so But when Tecelius knew that for this cause she would not give the mony he said that he shall be either burnt or banished
acknowledge nothing in the Supper but bread and wine and ascribe nothing unto the sacraments but that they be badges of Christian profession But now I affi●e before the Lord unto his Church as my diu●lged books can testify that I was never of that mind or did think that in the holy Supper nothing ●● given or distributed but bread and wine as empty signes of the Lords body and blood and not also the body and blood of the Lord. Likewise albeit in the sacraments I did speak of that as a main thing that they are the badges of our profession yet I never denied that the Lord gives those also for recommending his mercy and exhibiting the gi●ts of life yea and the same gift not in one place only The only thing that I did impugne was that the sacraments do of themselves confirm faith seing that is the work of the Holy Ghost But when the dispute continued and Luther had declared all the matter of the sacrament more fully I saw that he neither did unite the Lords body and blood by any naturall ty unto the bread and wine nor did inclose them locally in the bread and wine nor did ascribe unto the sacraments the proper virtue whereby they of themselves can bring salvation unto the receivers but he did assert only a sacramental union between the Lords body and the bread and between his blood and the wine and that he did teach that the confirmation of faith which is asscribed unto the sacraments is by virtue not which cleaveth unto the external things by themselves but which belongs unto Christ and is dispensed by his Spirit by means of the Word and the holy Sacraments So soon as I did observe this it was my serious purpose to shew and recommend it unto others and so I desire to testify in this place unto all men who shall read this that Luther and others who are truly with him and follow his teaching rightly doth not hold any impanation in the holy supper nor any local inclosing of Christs body in the bread or of the blood in the wine neither attributeth any saving power unto the external actions of the sacraments of themselves But they hold a substantiall presence and exhibition of the Lords body and blood with the bread and wine in the holy supper and the reby they declare plainly the words of the Lord and the testimony of the Apostle which presence and exhibition is certain by the Lords word and institution without any natural union of the Lords body and blood with the elements for the Lord doth not come down again from the heavenly glory into the condition of this corruptible life They do also acknowledge and preach the saving presence and exhibition but by virtue of the Lords and no● of the external action and that the communicants enjoy it when with true faith they partake of the sacraments Certainly our Saviour did intend as in all his actions so especially in the sacraments to advanoe our salvation which if wee enioy not it must be through our own fau●● For the bread which wee break is the communication of the Lords body and the cup of thankes-giving is the communication of his blood and unboubtedly unto the end that both the communion of Christ may growe●h us and all salvation may be perfected Therefore who knowing this mystery can doubt that all who are religiously partakers of the Lords table by the same partaking have their ●aith into Christ more confirmed that is more full salvation not indeed by the benefit of the external action of itself but through the good pleasure of our heavenly Father and power of our Lord Jesus Christ which he shewes toward us in the ministry of the holy Church For the more gravely and with the more religious ceremony the redemption of Christ and the communion is set forth in the holy table pious hearts that believe the promises of the Lord are the more commoved and do the more earnestly embrace the tendered communion of Christ and afterwards are the more zealous in confidence and duty unto Christ And therefore what either I in my former En●●rations or others have written against the natural union of the bread and Christs body or that local inclosing think not godly reader that those were against Luther and them that stand rightly with him for those neyther hold nor teach any such thing neither do the words which they do use carry such an opinion by themselves as even I thought some time for which only cause I did carpe at their words and I doubted not that their mind was any way more sound Huldric Zuinglius whom all that knew him know to have been Zealous and of admirable dexterity in windicating the Church unto Christ from the tyranny and superstition of the Pope when M. Luther and others contended that the bread is the body of the Lord or that the Lords body is in the bread did persuade himself that they thought the Lords body either to be turned into the same substance with the bread or to be inclosed locally in the bread and therefore he did alwayes alledge against the first If the bread be the Lords body the bread was crucified for us and against the other those passages which ●estify that the Lord left the earth and went into the heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father out of those he began to expound Is in the words of the Lord This is my body for signifieth and by the heat of contention he was so carryed that when he would impugne only the impanation and local inclosing or presence of Christ after the manner of this world and said that the Lord is more absent then present in the holy supper and that the signes are rather given here then the body and blood of the Lord and yet it was not his judgement that the Lord is simply or wholly absent from the supper or that the symboles are given without or altogether empty of the Lord body and blood as he himselfs professed afterwards when he was here treating about the agreement of the Churches in this particular and so did he write in the Apology unto the Princes of Germany for he there did maintain the presence of the Lord by the words of Augustine So sometimes when he would beware that men sought salvation by the external work of the ●acraments he averred plainly that the sacraments are but badges of Christian society and conferre nothing unto salvation But in other places he writes plainly that the sacraments do help faith Whence it it clea●e that when he writes Sacraments do confer nothing unto salvation nor confirm faith thereby he understood that the sacraments that is the outward actions of the sacraments have of themselves no power to strenghthen the conscience with encrease of faith for when he intended to prove that his saying The sacraments give not salvation nor confirm faith he alledgeth that to confirm or encrease faith is the work
of Christ by the Holy Ghost Which argument is like unto this God healeth by the power of nature therefore a Physician o● medicin help nothing thereunto Certainly only Christ worketh whole salvation in us and that not by the power of any other thing but by his only Spirit and nevertheless for the same effect in us he useth his word both visible in the s●craments and audible in the gospell and by them exhibiteth and bringeth remission of sins communion of himself and eternal life Zuingli●s did acknowledge this therefore when he denied that the sacraments give grace he understood the outward action of itself can do nothing to this purpose but all thing belonging to salvation is from the inward action of Christ and the sacraments are his instruments in some manner And it was Luther who first of all men did impugne this tenent of the School-men that the sacraments of themselves conferr grace without any good motion of ourselves and wihtou faith And so in this question Zuinglius did impugne what Luther taught not The same happened unto Oecolampade whom none doubteth to have been an excellent Divine if they read his works as he did read the Scriptures with singular modesty and reverence and was well acquainted with the fathers and did much esteem of them so he wrote very reverently and religiously of the sacraments howbeit he thought that Luther's wordes did import an impanation or local inclosing of Christs body and upon this account did impugne them for he writes so in his last dialogue when he would declare the difference The difference saith he is rather in the manner of the presence and absence then in the very presence and absence for none is so blunt to affirm that Christs body is every way absent or present Some hold that the Lords bread is the very body of Christ so that whosoever whether godly or ungodly do eat it they eat not only the bread and the sacrament but also the body of Christ bodily and let it down into the stomack But we speak against this and affirm that the element is not so honoured as that the most excellent of all creatures would unite himself into the same and natural substance of it or that he is so naturally contained in it that by it as a midle pipe grace is conveyed which the Holy Ghost gives unto believers and by the touch and tast of it even the ungodly do touch and eat the very body of Christ and are partakers of grace From those his words who may not see that Oecolampad impugneth three things only that the body of Christ is united with the bread into one and the same natural substance contained naturally in it and that by the touch or tast of bread all both godly and ungodly are partakers of grace But Luther did never affirm any of these albeit not a few did judge that those things were in the words which he did use in this purpose especially when he did deny any trope in the words This is my body I will also adioyn a whole epistle of Oecolampad where in he plainly avouches his faith concerning this point It is thus John Oecolampade unto N. a brother in Christ Grace and peace from God the Father I have need to be informed by thee my brother and thou comest unto mee and violently pressest mee unwilling to answer Is this thy tyranny tolerable and yet in Christ it is to be comported for it is friendly and brotherly and yet upon this condition that I may have the same power over thee and thou shalt impart unto mee thy judgement mutually when thou shalt receive mine Receive then plainly what I believe The sacramentall signes whereby the sacramentall promise concerning the remission of my sins that it may be more believed by my infirm conscience are not unto mee bread and wine for I who seek higher things make no reckoning what sort of bread and wine be given but I desire more admirable things and powerful to streng then my weak soul and those are no other but the very body and the very blood not the figure of the body and blood but the body that was given and suffered for my sins and which the Angels of heaven do enioy deliciously which Christ promised to give and did give to be meat not carnal but spiritual and the blood which flowed out of his body and was shed for my sins for that doth powerfully seal the promise of purging mee from all mine iniquity and for this I believe simply the words of Christ saying This is my body which shall be given for you and This is my blood of the new testament which is shed for you Whereby he testifieth that that body is a seal that sins are forgiuen unto him who believes and eates spiritually seing he suffered for this cause The word of Christ went first which the effect hath sealed by the holy seal I hunger and thirst for this bread and drink not that it as bodily meat may be converted into mee but that I may be turned into it and may become spiritual by spiritual meat that when I shall be in Christ Christ also abiding in mee to wit being received in the sacrament may by his grace work his own works that so I may be ready to obey all the members of Christ albeit it were to die for them as he died for mee and so I may be a true member in that his mysticall body not in the body of Antichrist because I desire not a portion with him but I desire to be a member of Christ though the lowest I can not speak more plainly take this in good part do with courage and trust in the Lord. Basile Aprile 19. By the providence of God saith Bucer this epistle is amongst the epistles of Zuinglius and Oecolampad which other ways were not happily published for in that book some epistles that were published in the first heat of the disputation came abroad again which annoy not so much the concorde of the Churches which the Lord gives at this time as the sincere and solid knowledge of those mysteries amongst not a few Moreover when I heard that those epistles were a printing and intended in a preface which might have been prefixed unto the work in name of some man in Basile to supply some things that were written in these epistles slenderly concerning the sacraments and therefore might offend many that the readers might understand how even that Church approves the right faith of the sacraments even as they had embraced it long ago and doth profess it soundly Some man the Lord forgive him caused the preface be published in my name And so when it is said in the beginning of the epistle When wee set forth those epis●les many did judge that I had caused these epistles to be divulged and thence did inferr that I do not intend the agreement of the Churches in the doctrine of the sacrament And because at this time I can
regard of the second sort Others ascribing predestination in all unto mans consent condemned both parts Who adhered unto Augustin said it was true in a compound sense but damnable in a divided sense This distinction was called dark though it was declared thus As he who moves can not stand still when he moves but he may at another time The 3 article The elect only are justified and the 6 article Those who are called and are not of the number of the elect never receive grace In these was admirable concorde saying It hath been alwayes the opinion of the Church that many receive grace and afterward loose it and are damned as Saul Salomon Luther As for the 6. that calling were an ungodly derision when those who are called and nothing wanting on their side are not admitted Against the 5 The justified can not fall from grace they brought the words of Ezekiel If the just leave his righteousnes c. and the example of David falling into adultery and of Peter denying Christ and they derided the foly of Zuinglius who said A just man can not fall from grace and yet sinneth in every work The other articles concerning the certainty of grace were condemned of temerity excepting extraordinary revelation When they came to frame decrees of those three particulares justification free-will and predestination it was hard to please all parties from the beginning of September untill the end of November scarcely passed one day in which the Legate took not some paines in changing some words as he was advised now by one party and then by another untill they were couched in this frame as ●hey are and then because of their ambiguity they pleased them all and the Superintendent Court of Rome also As for the Reformation the residence of Bishops was the only purpose and after much jangling an article was framed as the prelats would yet derogating nothing from no-residents except the inferior sort V In time of those disputes the Emperour prevailed in his warrs then the Pope being jealous thought to provide for himself before all Germany Variance concerning in the Synod were subdued he considered the Emperour might be along time busied there and so not able to vexe him with forces unless he could juduce the Protestants to come unto the Councel To dissolve the Councel it seemed too scandalous a remedy seing they had treated seven months and nothing was done or published Therefore he intends to publish the ●hings that were already digested and then the Protestants either will not come or shall be forced to accept and the chief controversies consisting in those points The victory were his own And it were sufficient to prove good for him that the Emperour would have had no controversies decided So as he directed at Trenta congregation was held January 3. 1547 the Imperialists oppose the holding of a Session nevertheless on the 13 day in the Session the Decrees were published and the next Session is to be held March 3. The same year So to the Dominican wrote three books de Natura et gratia as a Commentary on these Decrees of doctrine When these came abroad Vega a Franciscan set forth 15 greater books as a Commentary on the same Decrees They both allowed the anathematismes but in expounding the canons they were directly contradictory who reades them will marvell how those two leading men did not understand the sense of the Synod and Catharinus writing differently from them both gave at least occasionally all men to understand that the Synod agreed in words but never in sense Each party dedicates their books unto the Synod and printed apologies and antapologies making complaints that the adverse party did impute unto the Synod that which they never said and bringing testimonies of the Fathers to confirm their own opinion The Prelats were divided some neutrals said They knew no difference but allow the Decrees De Santa Cruce went with Vega and Catharinus De Monte was for the third party The Bishop of Biponto said in a Sermon The Synod was a congregated body and the Holy Ghost assisting them made them determin the truth though not understood by them as Cajaphas prophecied Others said God makes reprobates to prophecy without understanding but believers prophecy by illumination of their mind Others said Divines say uniformly Synodes do not deliberat of faith by Divine inspiration but by humane disquisition which the Spirit doth assist to keep them from errors so that they can not determine without understanding of the matter But truly they debating the contrary opinions when they were framing the decrees every one refused the words that were contrary unto his own mind and were all contented with the words which they thought appliable to his own opinion and they were not so curious in condemning the Protestants where-in they all did agree as what were said against themselves But in all these broils behold the hand of God! The Pope and the Emperour had contrary interests so had the Legates and the Prelats and so had the Dominicans and Franciscans even from their first beginning and could never agree so that the old phrase vatinianum odium was turned into Theologorum bellum when men would express an irreconcilable difference At that time all those parties professed an unity and yet were clashing one against another like flint-stones and God made the trueth to spark out from among them even against all their wills yea and to flash upon them when they were busiest to smother it VI. After that Session a general congregation was assembled the Session 7 next day to advise of the matter for the 7 Session In doctrine they resolve to follow the order of the Augustan Confession where the next point is of Ecclesiastical Ministery containing the authority of preaching and administring the sacraments Hence arises a controversy which of the two to debate first or both jointly The Legates fearing that in speaking of the first they might fall upon the authority of Councels and of the Pope enclined unto the reasons for beginning with the sacraments Concerning Reformation the chief points of not-residence were yet remaining here the Spanish Bishops and some others hoping to recover episcopal authority in their own Diocies as when the reservation of Benefices of Cases absolutions dispensations and the like were not known these I say brought many reasons to prove that residence of Bishops is de jure Divino and therefote the Pope can not call them from their charge neither dispence nor restrain their authority On the other side the Legates and others did cunningly shun that purpose and said His Holiness understanding to his great grief their former debates craves this question to be handled before himself at Rome and to assist the Synod with his counsel and because such is the Popes will no more speach should be of that particular but look to the Reformation of inconvenients which have caused the abuses of not-residence especially the plurality
their books and practises The other book is written by one of that Society bewailing the corruptions thereof as appeares by his epistle unto the Reader and in Pag. 37. he hath the words of Claud. Aquaviva their General complaining thus Secularity and Aulicism insinuating into the familiarity and favor of strangers is a disease of our Society dangerous both within and without unto them that are infected and Us the Superiors who almost know nothing of it Under a fair shew indeed of gaining Princes Prelats and potent Men of concil●ating such persons unto the Society for divine obedience of helping others but in truth wee seek ourselves and by degrees we decline into secular affaires And in Pag. 43. are these words of Joh. Mariana a Jesuit in his book De Morbis Societatis Cap. 19. Our rules have been oftymes changed the body of the Society is altogether contrary unto that which our Fundator Ignatius conceived and framed men are scandalized grumble and hate us for no other cause but that they see us so singular and interessed or seeking our own gain ..... None can deny that our society hath departed from right reason And in Pag. 49. he shewes that by the first foundation and also by later constitutions under Aquaviva they should follow the doctrin of S. Thomas Aquinas but because many questions are started up that were not known by him they follow no precedent He speaks of their prudence Pag. 12. as of men desirous to serve God and Mammon who because they have gone unto the world and hate God as Christ teaches Matt. 6. all good men should hate them and follow David who said Do I not hate them who hate thee o Lord Their last aim or end which they profess and fain is the glory of God and salvation of their own soul The middle and remoter end is the spiritual salvation of their nighbours and the nearest is the honor of the Apostolical See But really the end aimed-at and the rule of all things done by the Society according to the mind of their Superiors is the last the proper good of each one gain pleasure and glory And the middle remoter is the glory and vast dominion of their Generall And the nearest is the Monopoly of things that are of greatest necessity and worth as 1. of grace with God that none should be in favour with God nor obtain remission or absolution of sins but by Jesuites and that none should attain to honor Offices and wealth from Princes but by Jesuites 2. Of faith that none should be turned from paganism to Christianity nor from heresy to the catholick faith but by means of Jesuites 3. Of perfection that none should be held perfect or a Saint but by Jesuites that is unless he be of the Iesuites 4. Of learning that now none may learn Divin or humane Letters but under a Jesuite 5. Of vertue or good manners that none should be instructed but by the admonitions and example of Jesuits 6. Of fame or good name that none should be thought good or learned but by the suffrage of the Jesuites at least these not resisting In Pag. 28. he speakes of the fruits of this depraved Society and distinguishes them into inward and outward The inward are special or general The special are 1. in Superiors the ambition of the general affecting a Monarchy and vast Empire Courtliness secularity and Polypragmosyne or medling with many affaires and tyrannicall manner of domineering that is deceitfulness and violence 2. in the subjects effeminate and dainty breeding of Novices a great number and great licence of laiks Mangonia or a divelish way of alluring men into their society an unwillingness of mind or a desire to forsake the Society aloss of goods brought into the Society and beggery a hunting of inheritances flattering of Superiors and potent strangers quadruplies or delaying of pleas from time to time envy against the learned and famous without their Society contumacy against Superiors courtliness and secularity The general fruits are the multiplication of Colledges contrary unto the ordinances multitude of but half-learned Masters a sophistical way of teaching not for advancing of learning but serving unto the ambition of the General who would have many colledges and many Masters to be planted in new Schools paucity of men eminent in learning ........ hypocrisy doubleness simulation and dissimulation as of men living sparingly and disclosing themselves simply unto none a shameless denying of the things that are done by catholicks especially by the clergy though these things are known certainly a contumelious way of contending and disputing with the heterodoxe and stirring up of Princes into violence against them The external fruits are privat or publick the private are many children and young men do unwarily by impulsion of Jesuites●ty themselves with the vow of chastity that they must be Jesuites many hate learning and forsake it being terrified by the multitude of Grammare rules many are craftily cheated of their patrimony many indigent are deprived of godly mens alms many are through envy so diffamed that they can do no good in publick especially if the Pharisees conspire with the Herodians ..... The publick fruits are the first or secondary the first are ecclesiastical or Politicall The ecclesiastical are 1. rarity of Councels for they persuade men that Councels are not necessary seeing they can perform all thing concerning the preservation of faith and discipline 2. the unfitness of Bishops seeing by the teaching and example of their Masters the Jesuits they know not a contemplative life nor Apostolical patience ... Epicurism of the Sadducees or clerks who live so as if they believed neither resurrection nor that there is a soul and spirit .... the infamy of the antient sort of Monks as if they had been the broachers of all heresies some scandalous wicked and heretical opinions which they have hid for a long time and now having power dar vent them as may be seen in Apologia Perfectionis Mic. à Jesus Maria printed twice at Rome and again at Ravensburg c. The Political fruits are in respect of Princes or subjects through the flattering and indulgence of Confessary Iesuits is the tyranny of some Princes who account their will a law and their proper interest to be the end of their power seeing the Superiors of the Society commanding the same way and not only absolve Princes their imitators but also pronounce them blest c. In subjects the corruption of faith and manners ignorance imprudence for Jesuits partly by their traditions and partly by exemple persuad the people that God and Mammon may be both served and he may enter into the Kingdom of heaven who puts his hand to the plough and looks back again ..... as may be seen more fully in that Apologia The secundary fruits are the offense of God by profaning ecclesiastical goods ... civil wars arising from that warre that sinners have against God and from the bloody doctrin of Jesuites