Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n apostle_n believe_v doctrine_n 1,986 5 6.1175 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09859 The flowers of the liues of the most renowned saincts of the three kingdoms England Scotland, and Ireland written and collected out of the best authours and manuscripts of our nation, and distributed according to their feasts in the calendar. By the R. Father, Hierome Porter priest and monke of the holy order of Sainct Benedict, of the congregation of England. The first tome. Porter, Jerome, d. 1632.; Rucholle, Peeter, 1618-1647, engraver.; Baes, Martin, engraver. 1632 (1632) STC 20124; ESTC S114966 523,559 659

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Notwithstanding sayd he because you are hither come out of a farre countrey and with a desire as it seemes to me to communicate those things vnto vs which you your selues iudge to be in truth and worth the best we will not be troblesome or offensiue vnto you but rather entertayne you with courteous hospitalitie and see you prouided with all necessarie sustenance not forbidding yee in the meane time by preaching to draw whomsoeuer yee can of this countrey to the profession of your fayth and religion VI. THEN with the Kings good leaue AVGVSTINE and his fellowes went in procession to Canturbury the head cittie of Kent Augustine marcheth to Canturbury still carrying the Crosse and image of CHRIST before them and singing the Letanies vsing amongst others this pious forme of prayer Whe beseech thee O Lord in all thy mercie to take away and with-hould thy wrath and anger from this cittie and from thy holy house because we haue sinned against thee ALLELVIA Humbly by this kind of confession putting them selues amongst sinners whom they came to release from sinne and reconcile to allmightie God When this our Arch-Doctour leading his troupe of Preachers vnder the triumphant banner of the Crosse into the cittie which in future is to be his Metropolitan did not the Angell-Guardians crie out to the cittizens with those words of the Prophet Esay Open the gates and let the iust nation enter obseruing the truth of their embassage the old errour of Isaiae c. 29. v. 2. 3. Idolatrie is gone that from hence forth the peace of CHRIST and his Church may be here maintayned Here now the walles of Hiericho seemed to goe to ruine that the walles of Hierusalem might be built Here on the ruine of paganisme our holy Apostle first planted the Crosse of CHRIST and layd the foundation of the English Catholick Church But ô the heauenly and apostolicall life that these holy monkes AVGVSTINE and his fellowes led in the meane Their holy ●●se in Canturbury time what penne is able to expresse watching and prayer was theyr only and chiefest exercise allwaies keeping their soules most free from anie the lest thought of wordly desires or cares They announced the words of life to all they could making their owne liues soe correspondent to what they taught that in them those Idolaters might euen with their eyes reade a lesson of heauenly vertue and conuersation to see soe manie poore men soe constantly announcing the Ghospell of CHRIST that they seemed to be most readie to suffer all aduersities yea and death it self in defence of the trueth which they preached But what followed these beginnings Some few beleeued in IESVS-CHRIST and were baptised admiring the simplicitie of their innocent life and the sweetnes of their heauenly doctrine VII BVT in the East part of the cittie of Canturbury stood a See Heretick our first Apostles sayd masse Church dedicated to Saint MARTIN built in auncient times by the Romans in which the Queene was wont to pray and receaue the sacraments by the hands of her holy Bishop Lethard who was allowed her for that purpose and stood our Blessed Apostle S. AVGVSTINE in no small steed in the labour of preaching and conuerting the countrey In this Church allsoe AVGVSTINE his fellow-Mōkes executed their diuine seruice there they sung their Office there they sayd Masse there they prayed there they preached and baptised When in the meane time by the diuine power of allmightie God sainct AVGVSTINE indued with a heauenly grace of working miracles cured all the sick and diseased persons that were ether presented vnto him or that he him self visited in person Soe that the poeple were thunder-strucken with amazement at the sight of soe great vertue crying out that ether men were transformed into Gods or that the Gods in a humane shape were come to conuerse with men whereby their hardnes of heart being ouercome manie were receaued into the fould of CHRISTS Church And at length King ETHELBERT allso being astonished with soe manie resplendent signes of vertue by the dayly instancie and perswasion of S AVGVSTINE by the continuall prayers King Ethelbert is baptised of the Church by the affectionate admonitions of the Queene abiuring the deadly powers of hell became a sonne of diuine adoption in Christ And now on the sacred feast of Pentecost all the Saincts of heauen highly reioycing and manie troupes of poeple flocking to that great solemnitie AVGVSTINE as a new SILVESTER baptiseth ETHELBERT as an other Constantine In him our faythfull Dauid is annoynted with the oyle of Ioyfullnes and meekly seated in a throne of mercie Our Ecclesiasticall Salomon is crowned with a diadem of peace in the chayre of iustice and wisedom Our noble ETHELBERT descends from the state of his royall authoritie and shewes him self as a seruant to the seruants of CHRIST A Prince of princes is changed to an Euangelicall Little-one and a mightie commaunder of manie poeple professeth him self a companion to the poore AVGVSTINE reioyceth and much more his little Church that now they had gayned him to be their Patrone whom before they feared as a persecutour Haec mutatio dextrae Excelsi This is a chainge of the right hand of the most High VIII THE King therefore being baptised laboured him self to gett The zeale of King Ethelbert all the Kings Princes Nobles and common poeple vnder his gouernment to the subiection of the sweet yoake of CHRIST making it the chiefest part of his owne empire to dilate and propogate the Kingdom of Christs holy Church Wherevppon great multitudes of poeple flocked dayly to heare the word of God and forsaking the blindnes of their Diabolicall rites were purged in the sacred font of Baptisme Of whose fayth and conuersion the good King greatly reioyced yet compelled none by force to Christianitie but only embraced the faythfull beleeuers with a more strict affection as his fellow-citizens of the heauenly Kingdom For he had learned of the Doctours and authours S. August●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of England of his owne saluation that the seruice of CHRIST ought to be voluntary and not constrained In the meane time the holy master of our fayth saint AVGVSTINE went to Arelas in France where by the hands of Etherius Bishop of the same place he was consecrated Archbishop of the English nation according as holy Pope GREGORIE had pre-ordayned Whom returning into England with this sacred dignitie King ETHELBERT receaued with triumphant ioy and made him now the Ecclesiasticall President of his metropolitan cittie in which before he had entertayned him but as a guest and ordayned him the vigilant Guardian not only of that Cittie but allsoe of all the little world of his whole dominions The throne of his owne Kingdom he changed into a Bishops sea and his royall Pallace by the reformation and consecration of saint AVGVSTINE was turned into a sacred Church dedicated to CHRIST our S●uiour which to this day but built in a farre
thy bosome All which and all other thy monuments of antiquitie diuers haue soe largely elegantly learnedly and exactly searched into that there is scarse a stone a marble or a sepulcher extant within thy walles which hath not been particularly noted marked and examined But I would not haue the stick here to long I would not haue thine eyes throughts fixed on these trophies of vanitie I inuite thee to behold more noble and more excellent glories of thine and omiting all other thy only and chiefest ornament thy GREGORY who alone next to the two lights of the world the Apostles excelleth all the rest of thy wonders Nether yet is he thine soe much as Ours too Ours he is indeed not only because he shined vnto as with the bright lustre of his authoritie and vertues as to the rest of the world but allsoe principally because by his disciple S. AVGVSTIN he brought vs out of the blindnes of Idolatrie to see the light of the truth and made vs that were the sonnes of wrath become the children of CHRIST in the vnitie and peace of his Church Thine too he is because in thee he was begotten borne and bred and in thee ennobled with the sacred dignitie of Supreme Pastour of the Christian world Acknowledge therefore this thy great happines thy natiue and domesticque glorie Honour this most generous branch bred out of a noble holy roote And thou wretched England acknowledge likewise the inestimable benefitts receaued from this thy spirituall father and Apostle Looke vpō this bright sunne that first sent thee the light of truth haue regard to this thy pious fosterer who first fedd thee with the sweet milke of the ghospel Search exactly into his life workes and actions and euen therein thou shalt see how farre thou hast swerued from that fayth and religion which through his meanes was first planted within thy dominions and which as at that time thou didest embrance for truth soe yet I hope thou art not soe impudent as to denie for such Yf thou find then by the manner of this thy first Apostles life which was euer conformable to his doctrine that the present state of thy life and religion is contrary or other wise mainly differing from that which first he deliuered vnto thee be then most assured that thou hast erred and gone astray from thy first foundation and principles of the true religion which is not can be but one only This life was written in Latin by P●ul●s Dia●●n●● a Benedictin Monke aboue 850. yeares agoe and for the antiquitle we haue made choice of it rather then anie other I. GREGORY borne in Rome sonne to Gordian and Siluia descended His byrth and Parents from a noble race of Roman Senatours in whom nobilitie was adorned with religion and religion ennobled with vertue For Felix chief Pastour of the same sea Apostolicque was father vnto his great grandfather and a man of great vertue and integritie and in his time the glorie of CHRISTS Church But yet GREGORY in his pious conuersation manners was an ornament to the great nobilitie of his birth In fine as cleerly afterwards it appeared it was not without some great presage that this name was allotted him for Gregorins in Greeke signifies as much as Vigilant or Watchfull in English His name expounded and in very deed he was Watchfull ouer him self whilst exactely adhering to the commandments of God he led a vertuous laudable life here on earth He was Vigilant ouer the faythfull people of Gods Church when by the force of his fluent doctrine he made plaine vnto them the straight way to heauē From a child he was soe well instructed in the liberall sciences that albeit at that time the studie of learning florished much in Rome yet he was iudged second to none in the whole cittie In his age which as yet was but little and vnripe there was a mind full of mature studies and manlike endeauours to witt to stick to the sayings of his ancients and when he heard anle thing worthie of notice he would not by neglect committ it to obliuion but rather commend it to the strongest hould of his memorie Soe that then with a thirsty breast he sucked vpp strea mes of learning which afterwards with a mellifluous voyce he might vtter in due season II. IN the very time of his youth when that age is wont to enter The conuersation of his youth into the dangerous pathes of the world he began to settle him self in deuotion towards God and with all the desires of his heart to aspire to the countrey of euerlasting life But while he defferred the grace of his conuersion somewhat long and thought best after he was inspired with that heauenly desire to hide it vnder his secular apparell and to serue the world as it were in outward shew soe manie difficulties out of that little care of the world arose against him that now he was not detayned therein only in outward shew but allmost in mind too as he him self affirmeth Till as length the death He buildeth manie monasteries of his parents giuing him free scope to dispose of him self and his affaires he made that openly knowne which before lay hid vnder the secrecie of his mind that which before was only in the sight of him that sees all things he manifested now to the publick view of the world For distributing all his tēporall goods in pious workes to the end that in the state of pouertic he might follow CHRIST who for our sakes became poore he built six monasteries in Sicilie furnished thē with vertuous Monkes to sing the prayses of allmightie God The seauenth he erected within the walles of Rome in which afterwards hauing gathered togeather a great Conuent of Monks forsakesn the Pompe of the world he him self liued in regular discipline vnder the commaund and obedience of an Abbot Vnto these monasteries he allotted soe much yearly rent out of his owne meanes as might suffice each one for necessarie maintenance All the rest of his temporall goods howses and lands he should and dealed the money to the Poore turning hereby by a diuine inspiration all that glory and nobilitie which he seemed to haue in the world to purchase the happines of the euer-florishing cittie of heauen And he that before was wont to walde through the cittie of Rome cloathed in silkes and loaden with glittering gemmes afterwards couered with a poore simple weede became a poore seruant to the poore III. FOR hauing changed his secular apparell he went to the He taketh the habit of a Benedictin Monke monasterie and made a naked escape out of the shipwrack of the world There he began to liue in soe great grace of perfection that euen then in his very beginning he might be reckoned in the number of the perfect Soe that within a while being chosen by the common consent of the Conuent he refused not to vndertake the charge
learned men that zealed the Truth and good of the Benedictine Order to make a most exquisite and strict search into the monuments and bowells of antiquitie and finding that the opinion of Baronius was but a child that could by no meanes pretend anie title or right of descent from Authours of former ages they soe learnedly solidly and manifestly made the contrarie assertion appeare to the world to witt that sainct GREGORY was indeed a monk of sainct BENEDICT that that which before lay as it were buried in antiquitie and not thought on receaued for a truth but not talked on knowne of all but commended but off a few became more conspicuous to the world more glorious to the Benedictine Order and more famously treated off throughout the whole Church soe that the new opinion of Baronius serued but as a foyle more cleerly to sett forth the veritie of sainct GREGORIES being a Benedictine Monke and to make the world take better and more particular notice that soe great an Ornament of the vniuersall Church had been brought vp in the schoole of sainct BENEDICT But that we may take away all further difficultie in this matter let great sainct GREGORIE him self tell vs what Order he professed for surely no man can say but he is a iudge without exception and one whose authoritie is able to weigh downe more then I will name of such as write against vs. In his commentarie on the bocke of Kings writing to his Monkes and Nouices he vseth in manie places the expresse words of sainct BENEDICTS Rule and applies them to expound the holy text or rather makes vse of the text it self to cōfirme the precepts of the Benedictine Rule and there in citing the words of the same Rule he stileth our holy Father L●b 4. comm in 1. P●g c. 4 sainct BENEDICT with the title of Arctissimae vitae Magister optimus summae veritatis discipulus eruditus The best Master of the most strict life and a learned Disciple of the highest veritie Whereby it is manifest that sainct GREGORIE in proposing here the Rule and masthership of sainct BENEDICT vnto his Monkes for a patterne of their life and gouernment doeth acknowledge him self and them to be children of the same sainct BENEDICT whom he calleth his and their Best Master of strict regular life For yf he and his monkes were Basilians or Equitians or of anie other Order why doeth he not rather propose vnto them their Rules and call S. BASILL and Equitius their Best Master Were it not a thing strainge and against all rule for a Superiour of Franciscans or Dominicans to propose in a speech to his subiects the obseruance of the Rule of saint IGNATIVS and call him the Best Master of their Religion and profession omitting to make anie mention of his owne Patrones sainct FRANCIS or sainct DOMINICK Surely yf sainct GREGORY had been a disciple vnto Equitius as Baronius faynes he could not haue beene soe vnmindfull of the Father of his monasticall religion as to preferre sainct BENEDICT before him with the title of the Best Master of regular discipline and to propose his Rule to be obserued by his Monkes and not once in all his workes to make the lest mention of the Rule of sainct Equitius But how could he when neuer anie such rule hath euer yet appeared vnto the world But of his Best Master sainct BENEDICT he maketh such honourable and large mention that hauing dispatched the life of saint Equitius in one short chapter of his Dialogues he filleth a whole booke with the life vertues and miracles of our glorious Father sainct BENEDICT whose Rule he confirmed preferred before all others to shew the abundance of loue which he bore vnto him whom he stileth the Best Master of his monasticall life It would be too long to sett downe here all the places of our holy Father's saint BENEDICTS Rule which this great Doctour of the Church S. GREGORIE expoundeth to his Monkes in the aboue cited Cōmentarie on the booke of Kings It sufficeth for our purpose that he acknowledgeth S. BENEDICT for his Best Master and proposeth his Rule to be obserued by the Monkes of his Monasterie For what more manifest proofe can there be to shew that both he and the Monkes his subiects were all children of the Benedictine Order and that sainct AVGVTINE our Apostle and his fellow-monkes preachers were professou●s of the same Rule and Religion Thus much good Reader I haue thought good to insorme thee in this poynt not because the truth of the cause I defend did want anie such proofes but because there are some soe willfully blind in the opinion of Baronius that they doe yet striue against the whole streame of antiquitie and ancient Authours and seeke to maintaine his noueltie Against whom If thou chāce to encounter anie such thou art here sufficiently instructed to be able to speake some thing for the truth in this matter And doe not thinke that in disputing this poynt against a man soe worthyly deseruing of the Church as the most illustrious Cardinall Baronius we doe it with intent to lay an aspersion of disgrace on his glorie God forbid for the defence of the truth can disgrace noe man and especially him who in sayling through soe huge an Ocean as his Annalls are could not chose but erre in some things lest the world should haue taken him for some thing aboue the common sort of mortall men To conclude we see that the greatest part of our English SAINCTS are knowne allsoe to haue been of the holy Order of S. BENEDICT as it appeares in the ensuing treatise of their liues For the Catholick religion being first planted in England by the labours of S. AVGVSTINE his fellow-Monkes who were all Benedictines that holy Order was allsoe soe happyly rooted in the whole countrey and soe manie learned and holy men were bred and brought vp in the same that the whole English Church was gouerned by the Professours thereof and replenished with great store of SAINCTS of both sexes of the Benedictine familie there being noe other Rule of regular life but S. BENEDICTS on foote in England for the space of aboue seauen hundred yeares after the cōuersion of it to the Christian fayth Noe wonder then that the Benedictine Religion in England was the mother of soe manie and soe great SAINCTS Their liues and of all others I haue endeauoured to sett forth briefly with as great care as I could desiring thee for whose comfort I haue taken this paynes to weigh the faults yf anie thou chaunce to find in the ballance of good will and soe thou shalt not only encourage me to goe forward in this and a greater worke then this but allsoe oblige me to remayne thy friend desiring no other reward for my labours but thy prayers vnto these glorious SAINCTS that I may in the end be made participant of their heauenly companie In the meane time wishing thee the like happines I
of Abbott To be short he was soe abstinent in his diet soe vigilant in his prayers and soe vntired in his labour of fasting that out of ouer much weaknes in his stomacke he was searse able to subsist He susteyned besides a continuall sicknes of bodie and chiefly he was grieued with the trouble of that disease which the phistians call Syncopa in Greeke the crueltie whereof soe tormented his vitall parts that being taken with frequent and sudden agonies he seemed euery moment to be readie to yeeld vp the ghost But what manner of man he was in his monasterie and with how commendable an exercise he led his life we may gather out of his owne words which with weeping teares he vttered whē he was Pope His speech to Peter Deacon to Peter his Deacon saying My wretched minde being strucken with the wound of its owne present necessarie imployment remembers in what state it was in the monasterie how all sleeting things then See the happines of a Religious life were subiect vnto it how eminent it was aboue things that were tossed in the world that it was accoustumed to thinke on nothing but heauenly matters that being yet detayned within this body in contemplation it surpassed that inortall prison it self Yea and that which is a punishment allmost to all men it was in loue euen with death it self as being the entrance to life and the reward of labour But now by reason of this heauie pastorall charge it suffers in the affayres of secular men and after soe swcet a sorme of its owne quietnes it is defiled with the dust of worldly busines I consider therefore what J doe endure J consider what J haue lost and when J behould that which J haue lost the burden which I undergoe growes more greuious For now behould Iam tossed in the waues of a huge sea and in the ship of my mind I am dasht and beaten with the stormes of a mightie tempest and whilest J call to my remembrance the tranquillitie of my former life castling back my eyes to what is past J sigh at the sight of the desired shore And which is yet more irksome whilst I am discontentedly tossed in these huge waues I haue scarse the happines to see the hauen which I left Thus he was wont to relate of him self not bragging of his proficiencie in vertues but rather bewayling his deficiencie which he euer feared to runne into through his pastorall charge But allbeit he spake in this manner of him self out of a mind full of profound humilitie it becommeth vs notwithstanding to beleeue that by reason of his pastorall dignitie he lost nothing of his monasticall perfection Yea rather that he receaued thereby a greater aduancement in perfection by his labour in the conuersion of manie then he had in times past in the tranquillitie of his owne priuate contemplation IV. But by what meanes this blessed man was raysed first to the office of Deacon and after to the high dignitie of Chief Bishop the ensuing speech shall declare The Roman Bishop who then gouerned the Church preceauing GREGORIE to clime vp by the degrees of vertue He is made Deacō and the Po pes Legate to the height of perfectiō hauing called him out of his beloued monasterie heraysed the office dignitie of Ecclesiasticall orders made him the seauenth Leuite or Deacon for his assistance and not long after directed him as his legate or Commissarie to the cittie of Constantinople for answeares touching affayres of the Catholicque Church Nether Yet did GREGORY allbeit he were conuersant in a worldly pallace intermitt the purpose of his heauenly manner of life For the diuine prouidence soe ordayned for his greater good that diuers of the Monkes out of an obligation of fraternall loue followed him from the monasterie to the end that by their example as a shippe with Anchor he might be stayed at the pleasing shoare of prayer and contemplation and that whilest he was tossed with the continuall blowes of secular affayres he might flie to their companie as to the bosone of a most sure hauen after the volumes and waues of his worldly imployment And allthought that office with the sword of his externe labours now being abstracted from his monasterie despoyled him of his former tranquillitie of life notwithstanding among them the aspiration of his dayly remorse through the discourse of their earnest reading did giue him new courage of life Therfore by the companie of these he was not only fenced from worldly assaults but allsoe enkindled more and more to the exercises of a heauenly life Then at the earnest request of those his brethren and chiefly of that Venerable man LEANDER Archbishop He writteth moralls vppon Iob. of Siuill who at that time was come legate to Constantinople in the cause of the Visigothes he was compelled to explicate the booke of holy Iob soe intricate in misteries Nether had he the power to denie a worke which at the request of charitie brotherly loue did impose vppon him for the profitt of manie but in a course of thirtie fiue bookes he throughly instructed vs how the same booke of Iob is to be vnderstood litterally how to be applied to the hidden misteries of CHRIST and his Church and in what sense it may be fitted to euery Christian in particular In which worke of his he discourseth after such an admirable manner of vertues and vices that he seemeth not only to expresse those things in naked words only but after a manner to demonstrate them in visible formes Wherefore there is noe doubt but he had truly attayned to the perfection of the vertues them selues whose effects with soe much efficacie he was able to declare V WHILST yet he remayned in the same Royall cittie of Constantinople He ouerthroweth the heresie of Eutichius by the assistant grace of the Catholick truth he ouerthrew a new budding heresie of the state of Resurrection in the verie first appearance and beginning of it For indeed Eutichius Bishop of the same cittie held an opinion that our bodies in the glorie of the later resurrection should be impalpable and more subtile then ether the wind or ayre Which S. GREGORIE vnderstanding he prooued both by force of reason and truth and the example of our Lords resurrection that this assertion was wholly opposite to the doctrine of the Catholicque fayth which houldeth that this our verie bodie raysed in the glorie of the resurrection shall indeed not only be subtile by reason of its spirituall power but palpable allsoe to shew the truth of the nature according to the example of our Lords body of which raysed from death him self sayd to his disciples Palpate videte quin spiritus Luc 24. v. 39. carnem ossa non habet sicut me videtis habere Feele and see for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as yee see me haue For the assertion of this the Venerable Father of our faith GREGORY fought
the Archbishop of Arles in France wherein he commended saine AVGVSTINE and his fellowes to be by his charitie courteously receaued and assisted in what was necessarie for that holy enterprise III. SAINCT AVGVSTINE and his companie being strengthened and encouraged with these pious lines of the holy Pope ioyfully vndertooke the iourney which before they soe greatly feared But coming to Angeow in France being there much derided and scoffed at by the rude poeple of the Village and especially the woemen for their poore habits and humble manner of cariage they were compelled one night to take a hard lodging vnder a tree in the open view of the heauens where allmightie God who is neuer forgetfull of his seruants by the prayers of S. AVGVSTINE sent them a cleere fountaine of water which miraculously sprung out of the earth to quench the extremitie of their thirst Refreshed wherewith they sung the prayses of allmightie God all that night ouer whom in the A pillar of light ouer the Saincts meane time appeared a heauenly splendour which droue away the horrid shades of the night to the great comfort of his seruants and confused amazement of those rusticks that flocked thither the next morning ashamed and sorrowfull for their fault in soe reiecting Gods seruants Neere vnto the fountaine S. AVGVSTINE writt these words in the earth Here lodged Augustine the seruant of the seruants of A Church bu●● to S Augustine God whom the Blessed Pope Gregorie sent to conuert the Englishmen Whereby the poeple vnderstood who they were and the cause of their iourney greatly repenting for their insolencie shewed towards them And in the same place afterwards a church was built in memorie of S. AVGVSTINE into which entrance was forbbidden to all woemen because their sexe had most of all iniured the holy man in that place But a rich Matrone that by force as it were gott into that Church presuming on her owne guiltlessnes towards the Sainct by the miraculous and sudden losse of her owne life taught all men to beleeue who before would beleeue noe man she that thought with her presumption to ouercome all by her example gaue a plaine interdict to all neuer to presume the like But now let vs follow our diuine Legate AVGVSTINE entring the Ocean towards England IV. HAVING performed therefore all this long iourney by land on foote he now sayles into the Ocean world of great Britaine till he arriued with his fellowes to the number of fortie at the Iland of Kent called Tanet which may worthily triumphe that it was the first that receaued CHRIST in his legats And in the rock that S. AVGVSTINE first sett his foote he left the impression of his steppes as in a peece of waxe which place was of great deuotion manie yeares after Hauing taken interpreters out of France according to the direction of saint GREGORIE they marched into the land carrying a siluer Crosse for their ensigne with the Image of our Sauiour painted in a table finging litanies as they went as well for their owne health as for the saluation of those they came to instruct Behould here wretched England in what manner thy first Apostles brought thee the first tidings of the true Ghospell vnder the sacred banner of CHRISTS holy An Apostrophe to England Crosse and Image which since thou hast soe oftentimes broken and defaced out of thy dominions and which at this present by the greatest part of thy Inhabitants is held in soe great scorne and contempt that they will shew more iniurie thereunto then to the picture of the poorest of their owne auncestors Canst thou thinke of this and not be ashamed at thy owne madnes What hope canst thou haue of remayning still in the same truth of Christian doctrine which they planted in thy land since thou hast not only rooted out of thy bowells the sacred enfignes vnder which they brought thee the truth but allsoe art become a cruell enemie to men of the same profession as were thy first Apostles and Preachers How canst thou glorie with the Apostle PAVL in CHRIST crucified since soe traiter ously thou destroyest the sacred Image of CHRIST crucified How canst thou hope to be saued by CHRIST crucified the image of whose memorie thou seeketh to blott out of thy dominions Returne returne at length out of thy blindnes and reforme thy self to the life and manners of thy glorious Apostle saint AVGVSTINE who now marching with his companie in the Catholick manner of procession aforesayd expects to haue audience of the King of Kent then called ETHELBERT who kept his court at Ethelbert King of Kent Canturbury the head cittie of that countrey and who had dominion ouer all the land from thence to the riuer Humber in the North. This King had married a daughter of the royall blond of Erance called B●rtha who coming of Christian parents was giuen to him in mariage on condition to be let remayne in the profession of Christianitie And this good Queene was now as a gate to these menssengers of CHRIST to lay open their way to the King V. THEREFORE saint AVGVSTYNE sent fitt messengers vnto King ETHELBERT to let him vnderstand that he and his fellowes were Augustine sendeth to Ethelberts come from Rome sent by the vniuersall Pastour of the Church to bring the happines of health and saluation to him and his poeple yf they would but yeeld to those blessed tidings The King in whom the royaltie of a courteous mind seemed by nature to be incorporate comman̄ded them to expect him in the same I le of Tan●t and gaue order in the meane time to haue them prouided with all necessarie sustenance and entertaynment And after some few daies he went him self in person to the Iland to heare what newes those strangers brought VVhere sitting in the open ayre without anie other canopie of estate but the heauens be caused AVGVSTINE and his fellowes to be brought before him for led with a vaine and auncient superstition he had purposely refused to let them come to him in anie house lest they should deceaue him with witchcraft But they came not to charme him with anie such deuilish art but to winne him being allreadie charmed and blinded therewith to Our first Apostles caried a Crosse the diuine knowledge of allmightie God carrying a siluer Crosse and picture of CHRIST for their standard and singing Litanies for the saluation of him and his poeple Then after manie wishes of health and happines to the King AVGVSTINE in a long speech discouered vnto him the misteries of CHRISTS holy Ghospell and the euerlasting ioyes that followed those that truly beleeued therein To whom King ETHELBERT answered that indeed their words and promises were verie fayre but because to him they seemed to be Ethelberts answere to Augustine new and vncertaine he could not soe suddenly leaue his auncient customs and ceremonies soe long before obserued in his countrey to yeeld his consent vnto their nouelties
the honour of his towne report it to be enriched with the whole bodie of saint ALBAN then only with some of the dust of his tombe vsing a figuratiue speech of Rhetoricians and putting the VVhole for a Part. Or else the identitie Authours that affirme his bodie to be a S. Alba●s of the names of sainct ALBAN martir of Mentz and our saint ALBAN of England drew him to report that of ours which he should haue sayd of the other Howsoeuer he was deceaued this much we can say on our owne behalf ommitting to make an argument of the vnliklihood of the contrary assertion that Mathew Paris in the yeare 1179. Mathew VVestminster in the yeare 1259. VValsingham in the yeare 1313. Henry Huntington in the ninth booke of his history Thomas Rudburne in his greater Chronicle and others English writters of great creditt and authoritie and farre more conuersant in our histories then anie stranger can be doe constantly affirme that the sacred reliques of saint ALBAN remayned allwaies in his owne monastery in England and this the auncient records of the same place which I haue in my hands doe largely testifie by the vndiscontinued relation of the yearly miracles wrought at his tombe to the raygne of He●●y the second And in the yeare of grace 1257. Certaine workmen that were busied in repayring the Church of saint ALBANS digging somewhat deepe into the ground happened vppon the marble tombe in which his bodie had been layd presently after his martirdom at which time a heauenly splendour shined ouer his graue and the rauishing notes of Angelicall harmonie warbled fourth the prayses of the holy martir But the garment of Amphibalus sainct ALBANS His garment found spotted with fresh bloud Master in which sainct ALBAN suffered martirdom was afterwards carried to the Benedicti●e monasterie of Ely and there in a certaine tombe reserued which King Edward the second caused to be opened in his owne presence when it was found vncorrupted and stayned with fresh spotts of the bloud which he had s●ed for CHRIST who be for euer glorified in his Saincts Amen All Ecclesiasticall writers make very honourable mention of S. ALBAN of whom amongst others Fortunatus sings this verse Albanum egregium faecunda Britanniaprofert And Hiericus a Frenchman who florished seauen hundred yeares agoe hath these verses of him in the life of sainct GERMAN in which he mentioneth the executioners losse of his eyes Milliapaenarum Christi pro nomine passus Quem tandem rapuit capitis sententia caesi Sed non Lictoricessit res tuta superbo Vtque caput Sancto ceciderunt lumina soeuo His life we haue gathered out of Venerable Bede in his history of England and an other old Authour ancienter then Bede which we haue in written hand And besides the writers aboue named Gyldas Sapiens epist. de excidio Britanniae Geffrey of Monmouth hist Brit. lib. 5. cap. 5. the Roman Martirologe Vsuard Molanus and others doe largely speake his prayses In the Sarum Breuiary he hath an office of nine lessons in an auncient Manuscript breuiary of S. Benedicts Order which belonged to Burton vppon Trent he is serued with twelue lessons whereof eight are proper and which make large mention of his life and miracles An Appendix to the life of Sainct ALBAN contayning The Passion of Sainct AMPHIBALVS and other Martirs at the same time IVNE 22 Out of an auncient manuscript cited before THE famous miracles which went before and followed the death of our glorious Protomartir saint ALBAN moued The miracles of S. Alban conuerteth manie manie of the astonished assistants to be farre better affected to the Christian fayth then they were in soe much that had they had but a teacher it seemed they might easyly be brought not only to approoue but to embrace it for truth being of their owne accord allreadie well inclined thereunto Nether was the diuine goodnes wanting to their good will in this poynt by whose instinct one boulder then the rest stood vp and in this manner spake vnto them Yf only with words O fellow-citizens ALBAN had maintayned the truth of A citizēs speech to his fellovves his fayth it were not to be admired yf all men had reiected it as vayne and vnprofitable doctrine condemned by publick lawes and contrarie not only to the institutions of our ancestours but euen to reason the guide of all things But now since he hath confirmed his words and fayth with such admirable workes whosoeuer shall presume to denie it will seeme in resisting ALBAN to resist God him self by affirming that these wonderfull signes proceeded from anie other authour but God or that that fayth is not grounded in truth which is authorized by the testimonies of such diuine workes For when I pray you did our Gods euer performe the like When was the like heard off in our religion Moreouer the singular integritie The praise of S. Alban meekenes patience constancie pietie and other vertues of of this diuine man doe sett him forth amongst his other wonderfull workes for the greatest wonder Being vexed with soe manie taunts and reproches he reuiled noe man being afflicted with soe manie iniuries he was soe farre from making the lest shew of anie indignatiō of mind that he seemed more tobewayle our case then his owne Nay he went with soe ioyfull and cleere a countenance to his last deadly punishment that one would haue iudged him going to a banquet of mirth not to the scaffold of death Who doeth not see in this man a diuine power greater then humane frailtie Yf then these guifts doe proceed only from God surely he is not wont to bestow them on wicked impious and sacrilegious persons but on those that piously and holyly serue and worship him Nether is it to be doubted but that he will adorne vs and our common wealth with these and farre greater guifts then these yf we shew our selues plyant and dutifull to his diuine calling Let vs therefore follow ALBAN our Captaine and courragiously embrace his fayth and pietie which God graunt to be fortunate and happy to vs our children and our common wealth II. THESE and such like words being spoken in a great assembly of the Citizens of Verulam all publickly proclaymed that then the religion of CHRIST nothing was more diuine nothing more holy nothing more true Therefore they resolued to search the whole countrey ouer to find out AMPHIBALVS A●BANS guest who was a teacher of the Christian discipline But he was gone into VVales where with soe happy successe he had cast abrode the diuine seed of the Ghospell that he had filled all the countrey thereabouts with fruits of the Euangelicall haruest and the sweet odour of his owne fame and name whereuppon the cittizens of Verulam to the number of about a thousand left their house home and following the sent of his holy deeds vertues came at length to AMPHIBALVS who hauing vnderstood of the martirdō of his deare Host