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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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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
sins Here he expoundeth not that Text as the Rhemists and other late Papists do of a created Raphiel or other Angel and out of it they would prove the lawfullness of praying to Angels On Chap. 9. at the words And there arose a smoke out of the pit he saith That is the doctrine of wicked Hereticks is made manifest which is well compared unto smoke because it wants the light of truth and what in the Holy Scripture gives light unto the godly that poureth blindness upon Hereticks and they cease not to obscure the light of faith unto others ..... And there come locusts upon the earth to wit Disciples of errour come to deceive the earthly hearts of men for locusts neither walk forward as some wights neither do they flee as fowls because the Disciples of Hereticks and Hereticks themselves neither have upright faith that they may flee and seek heavenly things with the godly of whom Esaias saith Who are these which flee as Clouds nor have forward or right walking of works that they can say with the Psalmist He set my feet upon a Rock and directs my steps The locusts do leap and eat every green thing because they are lifted up with pride and kill so many souls as they can which have the greenness of faith ..... And it was commanded them that they should not hurt the grass .... Here the grass is taken in a good sense for it signifieth sucking ones which cannot eat solid meat but delight in the superfice of the Letter to whom the Apostle saith I could not speak unto you as spiritual men but as carnal ... And every green thing signifieth them who have made better progress who can now understand what John saith In the beginning was the word And the Trees are they who are perfect and strong in the faith because such can indure the wind of temptations .... But only the men which have not the sign of God in their fore-heads understand ye worthily because here are excluded not only those which are without the Church that is Pagans and Jews but also false Christians who have the sign in their body that is are baptized and are within the Church but with their works do defile the faith which they seem to have and therefore are hurt ..... seeing many do confess Christ in words only but having a form of godliness deny the power thereof they confess they know God but deny him by their works The Reader may judge whether in all this testimony he describeth not the Jesuits as if he had seen or had experience of them at least his words are contrary unto them for they especially do speak against the Scriptures and cease not to obscure them and so forth But especially mark how Haymo expounds The sign of God in their fore-heads whereas the Rhemists in their Annotations and others of that stamp do expound it of the sign of the Cross In lib. 6. on chap. 19. at the words I fell at his feet to worship .... he saith Because John saw him greater then himself he falling down would have worshipped him for here both the Angel and John take their own persons for whereas the Angel had said I am alpha and omega the first and the last he shews in this place that he was sent in the person of Christ when considering his own person he forbids that John do not worship him .... he saith See that is beware that thou do it not for I am thy fellow-servant for we both thou and I have one Lord and in nothing am I preferred above thee but in doctrine which I am sent to teach thee neither am I thy companion only but also of thy brethren to wit I profess my self the co-equal of all beleeving men which have the testimony of Jesus that is the faith of Jesus .... Worship God as if he had said Do not worship me who speak these words unto thee but him in whose person I appear How far differeth Haymo here from the Reformed Church And yet the Rhemists on that Text say The Protestants abuse this place and the example of the Angel forbidding Iohn to adore him ..... but in truth it makes for no such purpose but only warneth us that Divine honour and adoration due unto God alone may not be given unto Angels But we see that Haymo knew not any such distinction and he gives a reason why no Beleever should worship an Angel in any way In lib. 7. on the same chap. he saith If the first man had not sinned he had continued immortal but because he contemned God's command immediately he incurreth God's wrath and dieth A little after Haymo hath many significations of the word Sun in Scripture but he shews not that it signifieth the Pope At the last words of the Book he saith Observe this Book beginneth with grace and endeth in grace because both by prevening grace are we saved and by subsequent grace are we justified wherefore Paul also ordreth his Epistles unto the Churches in this manner that he beginneth with grace and closeth with grace He hath many such passages but these may serve for a tast of the doctrine of those times in the Church 19. Lupus was Abbot of the Monastery of Ferraria by the water Lupa running into Sene at the same time He writ several Epistles unto King Lewis to Hincmar c. which were Printed at Paris An. 1588. In the first Epistle he saith Now they are accounted troublesom who are desirous to learn and as if they were set in an high place the unlearned gaze on them continually and if they can espy any fault in them it is not called human frailty but it is imputed unto the quality of learning In the 2 and 4 Epistle He comforteth his Master Einhard after the death of his wife he speaks honourably of marriage and comfortably of the estate of the godly after this life without any mention of Purgatory or mass for the defunct and he interlaceth these sentences The word of God inlightneth the most obscure darkness of this life as it is said Thy word is a Lantern unto my feet The way of man is not in his own power but the footsteps of men are directed by God and the liberty of man's free-will hath altogether need of the help of God's grace When we are in any distress the more truly we are sensible of our frailty the more speedily should we run unto the help of God's mercy and it is sweetly said Where man's power faileth the help of God is present neither is this a long travel if we indeavour for he who calleth saying Come unto me who are weary he informeth them which come and without all doubt he crowneth them continuing in him Say with the famous and most sweet Augustine Give me Lord what thou biddest do and bid do what thou willest seeing God both prevenes and follows us that we may will or do any good In the 112 Epistle Let the worthiness
Hypocrisie came apace and the Roman Empire being removed Antichrist or the Bishop of Rome by degrees lifteth up his head above all that is called ●od Bernard who lived about the year 1140. comparing these three Ages in a Sermon which he calleth Parabola de Nuptiis Fily Regis saith when Satan saw that he could not by open Battel prevail against the Church in the days of the Apostles and Martyrs but that she did spread and increase he turneth to hid and fraudulent persecution to deceive some of her Members by whom the more powerfully and subtily he might execute his malice so by his craft he stirreth up Arrius Pelagius Photinus and such others who feigning themselves to be the servants of Christ might lead away his Spouse into Errors which Policy when the Holy Teachers did perceive they did oppose wrestle by disputations confute the Hereticks and brought their Lady again into the way of Truth ...... Behold the enemy is overcome both in his open persecutions and hid seductions and now the Spouse having no enemy walketh in pomp Nevertheless the crafty Serpent indeavoureth to spoil her and what he cannot do in the high way he layeth snares by the way side here he setteth Mony-changers with much gold and silver there he setteth the Sellers of precious cloaths and ornaments in another place wines and pleasant drinks and all sort of meats in another the Triumphs of them that glory in worldly pomp in another he shews fair maids and all enticements of Lust but who is wise walks with the Bride in the right way and the fools leave the way and take their pleasure in the Divels Tents and prefer them unto Christ And what shall I say of them who when they should rule the Church of God and having entred into the right way do look aside with admiration into the Tents of the Divel do look upon the things there and not finding to satisfie their desires do spoil the Bride of her Ornaments and wast them filthily fulfilling their wicked lusts so she goeth in rags and few abide with her so far Bernard The fourth Age is worse of Antichrist reigning and the Church lurking and contains the space of almost 300. years in which time both doctrine and holiness of conversation was almost utterly extinguished In the East the Mahumetists did prevail thorow Asia and Affrick and in the West the Bishops of Rome turn all up side down except that in some places and persons as well in the East as West holiness of life and purity of doctrine did in some measure remain but Pope Gregory the VII and his successors so far as they could did wrest all religion to serve their gain and ambition and to this end they violate all order dissolve all discipline deface all religion and domineer over Princes Emperours Nations and Consciences of men Before that time one might have spoken freely for the true Faith but now whatsoever the Pope willeth that must stand for an Oracle because the Pope cannot err forsooth and whatsoever is spoken against him ipso facto it is black heresie and punshied with fire and sword Then it might have been said the Church is gone into the Wilderness yet sending forth sufficient witnesses whose names are not obscure nor their doctrine unknown of whom some are mentioned here but for brevity I have passed over many who are recorded by others and many thousands who bowed not their knee to Baal nor received the Mark of the Beast are unknown The Fifth Age is of the Church reverting and Antichrist raging untill this present age when Reformation was aimed at and begun in the West Antichristian pride was detected and the number of true Believers did increase Then Satan was let loose again the thousand years of his binding from the daies of Constantine being expirēd then persecutions were frequent Antichrist foamed and opened his mouth wide to devour the sheep of Jesus But he who preserved the Woman in the Wilderness is the stronger so that the Gates of Hell were not able nor shall be able to prevail against her yea by the breath of his mouth and preaching of the Word her enemies are scattered Antichrist is revealed and true Christians are multiplied And in these five diversities of times I suppose the Church-history may well be comprised Herein my aim hath been to see where the true Church was before Martine Luther as the Papists are oft objecting and when the Romish Virgin became an Whore And for better method herein I have distinguished the foresaid Ages into their own Centuries and every Century into five Chapters The first Chapter is of Emperours because times were reckoned by them and in the second age they became chief Members of the Church under Christ the only Head both in degree and authority and we have just reason to think that some chapters or large passages of the Holy Revelation are understood of their estate seeing the Visions of Daniel run for the most part upon the civil Monarchies The second chapter is of the Bishops or Popes of Rome that we may know when the Tyranny of Antichrist did arise and how it came to such height The third is of divers Countries and contains the most notable things that have befallen in other parts of the World The fourth is of Britain that we be not strangers at home The last chapter is of Councels and declares the most remarkable Acts of the Church yet all the Canons that I have picked out are not of one sort for some are to be embraced and others are to be rejected which I have marked to let see that such errours and ungodly constitutions have not been alwaies in the Church as the vain glorious Papists believe or would make us believe These things howsoever worthy of consideration cannot be declared but we shall therewith receive many other usefull instructions especially what hath been the estate of the Catholick and true Church thorow these last thousand years in what places and persons the Truth hath had her abode and where and when Heresies did begin and what opposition was against them both in their birth and growth when a Nation or two was infected with an errour in the midst of the same erroneous Church were some Souldiers of Truth some standing up for one article or more and others maintaining other points albeit in some points the same Souldiers were infected with the poisonous milk of their diseased Teachers Or to speak more plainly we will see in the Western Church as it was wont to be called some following the Truth zealously in all points fundamental and therefore have been separated from the Church of Rome which being once a true Church and first in order by humane constitution hath in divers ages hatched many errours for she hath not abandoned all the principles of Christianity nor became so corrupt all at once and by her enchantments of worldly policy or by violence hath caused these nations to follow her now deceiving
still termed the Roman Empire and that Charls the Great was made Roman Emperour but because the Empire of Charls was after the 800. years I have deferred his Coronation unto this place The Romanists do boast that the Pope did give the Empire of the West unto King Charls and many not examining the truth but following the sway of Papal flatterers have written no less and therefore have called the transferring of the Empire an usurpation of Antichrist But the Pope had not as yet come to that height to pretend it and the right of Charls came another way for before he came to Rome An. 800. he had all France under his government together with Franconia and Austrasia he had taken a great part of Spain unto the River Iber from the Sarazens he had subdued Saxony Westphalia Datia Hungary Istria Dalmatia he had subdued all Italy except Magna Graecia and therefore he was intituled Charls by the Grace of God King of the Frenches Emperour of the Lombards and Patricius of the Romans So doth he name himself in his Epistle unto Alcwin which is in Biblioth de la Bigne tom 3. and Alcwin in his Epistle de Ratione septuages calleth him The Glorious Emperour Galliarum of France and Rector Defens or Ecclesiae Both these Epistles are in the second part of Alcwine's works I pass over what he did at his coming into the City because I have spoken of it in the former Century Platina in Leo the III. and Blond decad 3. lib. 10. say His Coronation was by the decree and prayers of the Roman people Sigebert in Chron. sheweth the time and cause saying The Romans who in heart were long before fallen from the Emperour of Constantinople taking the opportunity that a woman who had picked out the eys of her own son the Emperour had gotten the Dominion with one and general consent to proclaim King Charls for their Emperour and Crown him by the hand of the Pope Aene. Sylvius who was Pope Pius II. in his book De authoritate Rom. Imper. cap. 9. saith At last the Greek Princes neglecting Rome and leaving it to the spoil of the Barbarians and others the people of Rome who with their blood had purchased so great an Empire and with their valour had founded the Monarchy of the World saluted Charls King of the Germans for their Emperour not without the consent of the Bishop of Rome And Sigonius de regno Ital. lib. 4. saith that Charls had sought this Title in the daies of Adrian and then he brought an infinite multitude of people to see this spectacle Whereupon the same Authour accuseth the Writers which say that Charls knew not of this purpose Possibly the Senate and the Pope had agreed to accomplish their design on that day whereof Charls was either ignorant or unwilling but the purpose was his own desire So on Decemb. 25. An. 800. they crowned him by the hands of Pope Leo as the Emperour was wont to be crowned by the Bishop of Constantinope and the people cried thrice Carolo Augusto à Deo Coronato Magno Pacifico Imperatori Vita Victoria And the Pope anointed him and his son Pipin whom by a solemn decree he declared King of Italy Io. Naucler vol. 2. gener 27. The Pope knowing the dangers which had often befallen his Predecessours and himself did crave of the Emperour that he would be Protector of the Church of Rome and he gave publick faith If it be demanded then Who hath transferred the Empire from Greece to France Antonin Florent in Summ. Theol. par 3. tit 22. cap. 4. answereth for the general The authority of transferring the Imperial Seat is from the people of Rome As for this particular we see it clearly the King of France attained the Empire at that time partly by inheritance partly by the sword partly by dedition and the Title was given by the people and Bishop of Rome see Cent. 8. chap. 2. sect 12. neer the end and nothing was proper unto the Bishop but the Coronation and other Ceremonies which he did in name of the people after the custom at Constantinople As for Lands no History of credit saith that the Pope gave any unto the Emperour at any time as we may hear more hereafter in Cent. 12. chap. 1. § 3. and without doubt the Pope had a great stroke in this change and did act effectually amongst the Citizens for their own advancement but this change was not pretended to be by the power of the keys nor as yet was any of them the disposer of Empire or Kingdom At the same time also it was agreed that all the Head-men of the City as well Ecclesiastical as Secular should give their Oath of Fidelity unto the Emperour 2. That his Missus should dwel in the Palace of Saint Peter to decide Pleas amongst them unto whose entertainment was allotted a part of the former Emperour's Patrimony 3. If any man's cause was perverted by the ordinary Judges and that man did implore the aid of the Missus or Emperour's Commissioner for justice and the Missus did adjure the Princes of Rome saying By the faith ye ow unto my Lord the Emperour do this man Justice then none should dare to decline unto the right hand or left although the wrong were done by any of the Pope's kinsmen 4. That the mulcts which were exacted of any guilty person should be equally divided betwixt the Emperour's Missus and the Pope's Missus 5. If any goods fell under escheit they should appertain unto the Church without an express gift of the Emperour Continuato Eutrop. Catalo test ver lib. 8. And all this right was not sufficient unto King Charls nor did he injoy it without contradiction for Crantz in Saxon. lib. 2. cap. 8. saith The envy of this assumed name the Emperour of Constantinople not dissembling it did Charls overcome with much money and he did prevail against their contumacy by his magnanimity wherein he did excel the Greeks not a little and he sent many Embassadours unto them saith Baron ad An. 800. § 7. especially he sent unto Irene not only to treat for peace but sought her marriage that so he might confirm his Title She did admire the man's fortune and was willing saith Zonar But before his Embassadours came the second time into Constantinople the people when Irene was lying sick did Crown Nicephorus on the first day of Novemb. An. 802. and he compelled her to renounce the government and shut her into a Monastery Then saith Bergomas ad An. 796. he renewed the League that Irene had made before with him Sigonius saith They agreed on a League with expresse condition that Venice should be free betwixt the two Empires In the mean time Nicephorus was molested by the Sarazens and was forced to agree with them upon hard conditions and also was troubled by the Bulgarians over whom he had once great Victory but when he refused all conditions of peace they gathered
good works as is clear by the words following for when the Text saith That we may be holy and without blame before him he addeth Lest it come into ones mind that God hath chosen whom he willeth to be saved and thereupon one be slack and think it is not any more needfull to study unto vertue that one may attain life seeing they are already chosen according to the pleasure of God and there is no more hope unto others unto this he saith God hath chosen us that we should be holy and without blame that is that we should live in that holiness which God hath given unto us who have been washed in baptism therefore let us continue and keep a godly life Whence it is clear that he judgeth the moving cause to be the only will of God and thereupon follows that scruple which he removeth and this may be cleared from his words on v. 2. ch 2. 10. 3. Porsena marketh in the margine and Transubstantiation at the words of institution in Matth. 26 Panis qui sanctificatur in altario corpus caro Domini est non figura and the words in the line are When he saith This is my body he sheweth that the bread which is sanctified on the Altar is the same body of Christ and not an answering figure for he said not This is a figure but This is my body for by unspeakable operation it is transformed although it seem unto us to be bread because we are infirm and do abhor to eat raw flesh especially the flesh of man and therefore it appears bread and is flesh And on Mar. 14 When he had blessed that is had given thanks he broke the bread which also we do adjoining prayer This is my body this I say which ye take for the bread is not a figure only and some exemplar of the Lord's body but the body of Christ is converted into it For the Lord said The bread that I will give you is my flesh he said not it is the figure of my flesh but it is my flesh And again Unless ye eat the flesh of the son of man But you will say How is not the flesh seen O man that is because of our infirmity for because bread and wine are of such things wherewith we are accustomed we abhor them not but if we saw blood and flesh set before us we could not indure them but would abhor them therefore the mercifull God condescending unto our weakness keeps still the forms of bread and wine but transelementateth them into the vertue of flesh and blood These be his words without any fault in the translation Now behold the vanity of man's mind when it is fond on a thing Ixion as the fable is would so fain have had Iuno that he thought he had her in his imbracement when he had but the wind or cloud So the Romanists think they have here their transubstantiation when they have but words far different from what they do fancy In these testimonies they lay hold on two passages First The bread which is sanctified is the same body of Christ and not an answering figure I would they could conjoin the words on Mark It is not a figure only and some exemplar of the Lord's body Where the Authour denieth not simply or absolutely that the bread is a figure and exemplar of Christ's body but saith he It is not a figure only or it is not only a figure and some exemplar therefore according to his mind It is a figure and some exemplar but more then a bare figure and a special kind of exemplar Against whom is this said I have read it imputed unto some that the bread is a meer sign of Christ's body but I never read any who hath so affirmed except Socinians or Anabaptists So then in these words Theophylact speaks according to the mind of the Reformed Church But he saith It is the same body of Christ And so saith Christ himself This is my body and so say we Therefore the question is in what sence the bread is his body Next they say It is by transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ Here first mark that the former passage proveth it not 2. Where saith Theophylact so they say in these words By unspeakable operation it is transformed although it seem to be bread I answer In so great a matter the words ought to be considered attentively What is transformation it is two-fold if we speak properly external and internal External is when the outward form of a thing is changed into another but this is not in the Sacrament which keeps still the forms of bread and wine as it is said expressly in the words on Mark. Internal transformation is when not only the outward form is changed but the inward nature and essence of a thing is changed into another which was before as when Lot's wife was turned into a Pillar of salt or Moses's rod into a Serpent But Theophylact saith It appears bread and is flesh Wherefore he meaneth not a proper transformation but an improper kind and so saith the Reformed Churches The Romanists say he saith The bread is transformed into the body of Christ Where saith he so not on Matthew for his words are But the body of Christ is turned or converted into it It is one thing the bread is transformed into the body of Christ and another thing Christ's body is converted into the bread and therefore he saith God transelementeth the bread into the vertue of flesh So neither on Matthew nor Mark either first or last doth Theophylact assert a transformation or transubstantiation of the bread into the body of Christ but in the first place he speaks of a converting of Christ's body into the bread and in the other he speaks of a transelementation of the bread into the vertue of flesh and the Papists do hold neither one nor the other As yet I speak not of the truth of the matter nor of the meaning of the Authour but shew how the Papists delude themselves with his words As for his meaning in this matter unless his words be contrary one to another the first words must be expounded by the latter that is when he saith The body of Christ is converted into the bread he meaneth God keeps still the forms of the bread and wine both outward and inward but transelementates them into the vertue of Christ's flesh and blood that is from bare and earthly things he translates them into another rank for this is the proper signification of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to set in another file or rank of things even of spiritual things even of sealing and conveying unto us the vertue of Christ's body and blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly is to remove a souldier from one file into another and then the souldier changeth not his nature but his place and use and so it is with the elements of the Sacrament And we may be the more
Amelphis John or Gregory VI. Because Satan could not openly persecute Christ by Pagans he craftily intends to subvert the name of Christ by a false Monk under shew of Religion but albeit God permit such things to be done our sins so deserving yet the time of recompense is at hand Catal. test ver li. 13. Many other Books were written against this Hildebrand there is named one in the German tongue written by Waltram Bishop of Niembergh as is thought the Author bewails the miseries of the Church and lewdness of Clerks then he addes Hence the Catholique faith is defiled hence that unrighteousness hath waxed so that instead of truth false testimonies and for common faith perjuries do abound since Laws are silent giving place to wars that saying of Hoseah is fulfilled There is no truth nor knowledge of God nor mercy in the land cursing and lyes murther and stealing have overflowed Behold some Bishops have joyned unto the faction of Hildebrand accounting more of him then of all the Catholique Church so it comes to pass that while the enemy so weth in the Lord's field the tares of many scandals that now in Bishopricks are no Sacraments of Christ and his Church which should be the work of the Bishops of God but execrations which are the works of the Servants of Satan who as Cyprian writes seeing Idols forsaken and his Temples left by the multitude of Believers hath devised a new craft under the name of a Christian he deceives the unwise and by Heresies and Schisms he overthrows the faith c. In another place he saith Now it appears Satan is loosed out of the pit seeing as it is written he is come forth to deceive the Nations Ia. Vsser de Eccles statu c. 5. hath the same The above-named Waltram in another place lamenteth That then a new sort of Bishops swelling in pride because of the gifts of Believers drew all things unto themselves under cloke of Religion and they were painted walls and hypocrites 12. When Gregory and Victor the two heads of that pernicious faction More opposition against that faction were gone the Bishops of Germany and France considering the calamities of the Church by that unhappy Schism thought good to meet at Garstung for debating their strife no more with swords but with reasonings so the Bishops of both factions conveen in January There Conrad Bishop of Utrecht had a long Oration to this purpose We are assembled prudent Fathers to establish peace which our Saviour at his departure did leave the temerity violence and pestiferous errors of those who are not ashamed to dispise that heavenly gift I wish I could cut in sunder with the two-edged sword and confute with the testimonies of the two Testaments according to Christ's command Who despiseth an Oath breaks covenant and keeps not promise dispiseth him by whom he hath sworn he offends him whose name the other party hath believed As I live saith the Lord the Oath that he hath dispised and the Covenant that he hath transgressed shall I bring upon his pate Shall he who hath transgressed his Covenant escape You must consider not so much unto whom as by whom thou hast sworn and he is more faithful who did believe thee swearing by the name of God then thou art who hatchest mischief against thy enemy or rather now thy friend and that by reason of divine Majesty We finde it commanded concerning Tiberius and Nero who were not onely most cruel Tyrants but most vile Monsters Give to Caesar what is Caesars and fear God and honor the King and not onely be obedient unto Princes who bear not the sword in vain even though they be evil but supplicate the most high God for them that under them we may lead a quiet and peaceable life All power is of God and he who resists power resists the providence of God Therefore those are ambitious and presumptuous who dare with whorish faces misinterpret that saying of our Lord and God What ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven and what ye binde on earth shall be bound in heaven and force it to serve unto their own lust and indeavor to gull us as if we were children without all knowledge Our heavenly Teacher did open the hearts of his disciples to understand the Scriptures Moses the Prophets and the Psalms and he commanded them to preach in his name unto all the Nations repentance and forgiveness of sins and that they should be witnesses of those things Therefore Hildebrand was carried headlong into ambition when he usurped the power of the eternal God whose Messenger he should have been such are the times now such are the maners and such are the men The most high Majesty had provided but slenderly for the affairs of mortals if he had so intrusted the sword into the hand of any man Who could restrain the lust of men who could rule it truly the wisest is not sufficient for such a burthen We have not need that any should teach us in what maner Peter and his Colleagues did use their spiritual power or to speak more properly the dispensation and administration of God's stewardship for they were but stewards of the divine Oracles It is as clear as the light by the book which the Physitian Luke hath written of the Acts of Christ's Messengers the weapons of our warfare are spiritual and not iron nor robberies murthers killing of men nor perjuries and our helmet breast-plate girdle buckler and sword are peace love righteousness hope of salvation truth the word of God and faith These Divine Gifts our most Christian Emperor did often proffer most willingly unto Hildebrand but he refused to accept them c. The Papal party had chosen Gebhard Bishop of Salisburgh to speak in their name but when he heard this Oration he would not open his mouth to speak in the contrary Avent Annal. lib. 5. It was appointed at that time to assemble again in May at Mentz The Papal party did preveen the time and assembled at Quintelburgh now called Quedlinburgh in April there they wrested some words of Wezilo Bishop of Mentz and condemned him as an Arch-Heretique they called themselves the true Church and consented unto the election of Clemens III. The Synod at Mentz was very solemn there was the Emperor the Electors and many Dukes Peter Bishop of Portua and Legate of Clemens and many Bishops of France and Germany by common suffrage the faction of Hildebrand was condemned as contrary unto Christian piety and a Decree was published to this purpose All Christians should shun the company of those accursed persons whom we have named seeing they have made defection from us and not we from them they promised to be present at this Synod but they will not come they abuse Christian piety and leaving the sheep they run unto the enemies of the Republique they not onely exhort unto fire and sword but also are ring-leaders and Captains of the war What would
and to teach the people but let him teach these things that he hath learned from God and not of his own heart or the mindes of men but what the holy ghost teacheth Dist 9. cap. 6. As the truth of the old Books is to be examined by the Hebrew Books so the truth of the new craveth the rule of the Greek Language Dist 99. cap. 3. The Bishop of the first See should not be called the Prince of Priests nor the highest Priest or any such way but onely the Bishop of the first See but let not even the Bishop of Rome be called universal Dist 95. c. olim In old time he was a Bishop that was a Presbyter and ere that by instinct of the divel factions and schisms were in Religion and it was said among the people I am Apollo's and I am Cepha's the Churches were governed by the Common Counsel of the Presbyters so let Bishops know that by custom more then by truth of the Lord's dispensation they are greater then the Presbyters and that they should govern the Church in common Caus 1. qu. 1. c. Augustinus Take the word from the water and what is it but water the word is added unto the element and then it is a Sacrament whence is this vertue unto the water that it toucheth the body and washeth the heart the word doth it not because it is spoken but because it is believed for in the word it self the passing sound is one thing and the abiding vertue is another De Consecra Dist 2. c. Comperimus We have found that some when they have taken onely the portion of the holy body do abstain from the cup of the holy blood who without doubt because I know not by what superstition they are taught to be restrained should either take the whole Sacrament or be debarred from all because the division of one and the same Sacrament cannot be without great sacriledge Ca. prima quidem Till this world be finished the Lord is above and yet the truth of the Lord is also here with us for the body in which he arose must be in one place but his truth is diffused every where C. Hoc est The bread is after a maner called the body of Christ whereas indeed it is the Sacrament of his body and the offering which is by the hand of the Priest is called Christ's passion death and crucifying not in truth of the thing but in a signifying mystery Where the Gloss saith The bread i. e. the Sacrament which truly representeth the flesh of Christ is called his body but improperly that is it signifieth Ca. In Christo What do we then do we not offer every day yea but in remembrance of his death it is done in remembrance thereof what is done Ca. Quia corpus Because he was to remove his body from our eyes and carry it above the Stars it was needful that on the day of the Supper he should consecrate the Sacrament of his body and blood to the end it should be always reverenced in a mystery which was once offered in payment Many such passages are in these Decrees which differing from the doctrine of the Church of Rome now do prove that the Romish Church now is not such as it was then Pope Eugenius did approve all these Decrees and ordained that these should be read in Schools and Universities instead of all Canons and Decrees that so he might the more easily draw them all under one yoke 30. Peter Lombard Bishop of Paris at the same time followed the footsteps Some notes of Lombard's sentences of Gratian and gathered the sum of Divinity into four Books of sentences out of the writings of the Fathers but as I said of Gratians Decrees with adding mincing and changing of words and letters and suitably unto his time and these sentences were authorised as the Text in all Schools to the end none from thenceforth should search antiquity and truth any more from Fathers or Councels under no less danger then guiltiness of heresie Hear what Cor. Agrippa De vanit scient cap. 97. saith of this Scholastick Theology It is saith he of the kinde of Centaures a two-fold discipline blown up by the Sorbon of Paris with a sort of mixtion of Divine oracles and Philosophical reasonings written after a new form and far different from the ancient customs by questions and slie syllogisms without all ornament of language but otherwise full of judgement and understanding and profitable to convince hereticks It cometh to pass that the faculty of Scholastick Theology is not free from error and wickedness these cursed hypocrites and bold Sophists have brought in so many heresies which preach Christ not of good will as Paul saith but of contention so that there is more agreement among Philosophers then among these Divines who have extinguished ancient Divinity with opinions of men and new errors c. Here Barth Gravius a Printer at Lovane about the year 1565. giveth us some light In his Epistle before his Edition of these Sentences he telleth that he had a purpose to reduce all the testimonies unto the first fountains in sincerity but to his great admiration he was informed by the Masters there it could not be so because albeit in other Editions innumerable places were corrected yet many errors as yet were remaining and these not little ones and not a few things as in the Edition at Paris were changed not according to the truth of the old books but in conjecture yea and the old words were corrupted oft times through an immoderate desire of amending and in not a few places the worse was put for the better and saith he this may not be dissembled that the genuine reading of the Master in quoting the testimonies of the ancient writers is very oft changed into the truth of its original especially no old Copy witnessing that he had left it so written for the Master was not so solicitous to repeat all their places wholly but thought it sufficient to propound the matter briefly and leave out many lines in the middle and therefore it were not according to his minde to fill up what he hath omitted yea they have found by sure arguments that he had transcribed many things not from the very fountains but from Hugo Victorian and especially out of the Glossa Ordinaria where these passages are not found in a continued context as in their own Authors but maimedly and sometimes but in broken pieces as it were out of sundry Books and Chapters and mixed together as in a hotchpotch and so if any thing be corrupt in the Master it must not be reduced unto the first fountains but rather unto the Books of the Glossa because it was last taken thence And also he was sometimes deceived in reading it wrong possibly and lead into error in which case to amend him according to the square of his Author were most absurd and madness they said also that in quoting the Authors he
had the upper hand and when the Soldiers asked the Abbot of Cistertian what they should do because they knew not who were Hereticks and who were not he answered Kill all God knoweth who are his So they spare neither age nor sex Caesar Hist lib. 5. cap. 21. Many hundreds were burnt many were hanged and many thousands were slain in other places I. Thuan. ad An. 1550 In a word they prevailed so that Raymund was robbed of all his lands almost and went to Rome An. 1215. and promised obedience unto the Church if the Pope would cause his lands to be restored Innocentius answered The expedition was chargeable unto the Church and unto Simon de Monford and therefore he had given these lands unto Simon and it was past the King's confirmation and could not be recalled onely he would grant unto Raymund 400. marks yearly during his life if he shall continue under obedience Then Raymund went to Arragon and levied an Army of 100000. men and within a year he recovered by strength all his lands Simon was killed An. 1218. and 22000. men with him so was his Son Guido An. 1219. Io. de Serres Then King Philip sent his Son Lewes once and again against Tolouse but all in vain so long as Raymund lived and Roger de Foy both which died within one moneth An. 1221. His Son Raymund whether for fear of worldly opposition or if he left the doctrine which his Father had professed it is uncertain offered all obedience unto the Church and King if they would grant him peace Almaric the Son of Simon de Montford appeareth in the contrary alledging his Title unto the County of Tolouse which was granted unto his Father and confirmed by the Pope and the King In the mean time Philip dieth and left unto Almaric 20000. some write 100000. lievers of Paris for a new expedition against Tolouse and at last by perswasion of Romanus Cardinal de St. Angelo the Pope's Legat Lewes VIII King of France with Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Peers Barons and 50000. horse with a great number of foot which arose for fear of the King and the Pope's Legate more then for zeal to the cause saith Mat. Paris in Hen. III. they were marked with the sign of the Cross against the Hereticks as they spake of Tolouse and Avenion which also belonged unto Raymund and boasting to destroy all the means and men within his Dominions An. 1226. They came first to Avenion craving passage through the Town for shortness of way The Citizens said They feared more danger The King sware he would not rise from siege till he had taken the City They had so provided that within were neither old persons nor women nor children and all beastials were removed and all the meadows were tilled that the King had scarcity without and they within had plenty so without was dearth and death as was reckoned of 22000. Simon and the Pope's General were killed with stones out of slings Some of the Nobility crave leave to return but obtain it not The King dieth Romanus causeth his death to be concealed and after asking a treaty for peace which was refused he craveth that he and the Prelates may enter the City to try if the wickedness was so great as the cry thereof was come unto the Pope's ears and swore that he minded nothing but the salvation of souls But he contemned his oath brought in the Army brake their walls and slew many of them Mat. Paris ad An. 1226. in Hen. III. In the year 1228. Raymund did rout his adversaries in three several battels idem Then they invade Tolouse but so that the yong King was glad to seek peace and the Earl accepteth it on good conditions Then the Pope sent the Marshal de la Foy with a fresh Army King Lewes would not allow it and said They should perswade by reason and not constrain by force Io. de Serres When open wars were ended the Bishops and Friers were busie with burning and hanging and these broyls were not ended for seventy years saith Bertrand Ia. Thuan. in the dedication of his History telleth summarily the success They were killed or banished and scattered hither and thither but not convicted of errors nor brought into repentance some fled into Province or near unto the Alps finding lurking holes for their liyes and doctrine some went into Calabria and their followers abode there until the Papacy of Pius the IV. some setled in Bohem Poland and Livonia and of their reliques in Britain was John Wickliff in Oxford So Thuan. Wheresoever they went Satan followed to devour them And all the Historians of those times shew how they were persecuted as Vsser hath marked particularly loc cit ca. 10. Innocentius III. caused the bones of Almaric to be burnt a learned Bishop at Paris because he had taught that no sin is imputed unto man in the state of grace and Images should not be in Churches and other twenty four persons for the same doctrine An. 1210. Io. Bale Cent. 3. cap. 67. in Appen sheweth ex Bern. Lutzenburg that when Dominicus with twelve Cistertian Monks was sent against them the sum of them who were killed in the wars were 100000. persons and out of Christ Massanus That in the Diocy of Narbon 140. men chose rather to suffer the fire then accept the doctrine of Rome An. 1210. And in the next year 400. were burnt within the Diocy of Tolouse eighty were beheaded and Almericus Captain of the Castle of Vare was hanged and his wife was stoned to death M. Fox in Act. Monim sheweth out of Herm. Mutius that An. 1212. sundry Noble men and others in the County of Alsatia did hold that every day was free for eating of flesh if it be soberly and that they do wickedly who hinder Priests from lawful marriage Therefore Innocentius caused an hundred of them to be burnt in one day Nauclerus sheweth that at the same time were many of the same doctrine at Millan who sent relief unto their Brethren in Alsatia An. 1220. William a Goldsmith was burnt because he said Rome was Babylon and the Pope was Antichrist Bale ex Caesar in dialog Desiderius à Lombard at the same time was called Haeresiarcha because he wrote against the begging Friers We read of many such other burnings and martyrdoms in other places and times but the truth could not be burnt nor overthrown nor want her witnesses 5. Guilielmus de Alta Petra Bishop of Paris about the year 1220. wrote a book De Clero wherein he speaketh of the Clergy of his time in this maner No godliness or learning is seen in them but rather all divellish filthiness and monstrous vices their sins are not simply sins but monsters of sins they are not the Church but Babylon Egypt and Sodom the Prelates build not the Church but destroy it they mock God and they and their Priests do profane the body of Christ they lift up to the heavens with all
maner of Ecclesiastical honor the limbs of the divel and enemies of God in a word they bring Lucifer into the Church of Christ He taught also that there is no law belonging unto the salvation of man but the Gospel of Christ 6. Joachim Abbot of Curacon in Calabria about the year 1200. held and and taught that the Pope and his Court were the Antichrist because they were drowned in simony and luxury by their wickedness they hindered the Jews and Pagans from converting unto Christ He wrote prophetical pictures upon the Revelation with Italian expositions wherein he sharply taxeth the Pope and his Clergy In his Commentary on Jeremiah he saith The days shall be perillous from the year 1200. until the last times when the law of liberty shall appear the Gospel of Christ shall be preached and the Church shall be purged as the wheat from the chaff and tares Pope Innocentius the III. condemned him as thinking amiss of the Trinity and saying that he who believeth the Trinity of persons and unity of nature or essence establisheth a quaternity But as we said Antoninus sheweth that the Pope condemned that error as his but he condemned not himself And Mar. Luther in a peculiar Treatise cleareth this Joachim from all error of the faith in the Trinity Catal. test verit lib. 17. and certainly all is not sure that is set down in the Decretals M. Fox in Act. Monim sheweth ex Roge. Honeden that when Richard King of England went to Syria by the way he sent for Joachim to meet him in Sicily and asked him many things among the rest he asked what he thought of the coming of the Antichrist He began to expound the mystery of the seven Kings in the Apocalypse these are seven persecutors Herod Nero Constantius Mahumet Melsemutus Saladin and Antichrist and Antichrist is now sitting in the City of Rome and in his Apostolical throne as the Apostle saith he is an adversary and exalteth himself above all that is called God Also he foretold the estate of the Church all the Church of the Saints shall be hid for the elect of God what they know they shall know it to themselves so that they will not presume to preach publickly because of prevailing darkness not that they will leave to encourage and exhort the faithful privately but because they will not dare to preach publickly Vsser de Eccles statu cap. 6. ex Roge. Honen annal in Rich. II. 7. Conradus a Lichtenal was made abbas Vrspergensis An. 1215. In the History of Henry the V. Emperor he sheweth that many at that time did reprove peregrinations and indulgences and in that place he calleth them a novelty He writeth many things in favor of Popes yet the force of truth sometimes prevaileth with them he condemneth Pope Gregory the IX for excommunicating the Emperor without just causes and without all order he condemneth the Pope for taking Lands from the Emperor in his absence whereas he had forced him to go away and for killing some who were signed with the Cross because they were going to aid the Emperor against the Turks which saith he is most abominable to speak He made this rhime of the avarice of Rome Epephonema ex vita Phil. Imp. Gaude mater nostra Roma Quoniam aperiuntur cataractae Thesaurorum In terra Vt ad te confluant rivi aggeres Nummorum In magna copia Laetare super iniquitate hominum Quoniam ad recompensationem Tantorum malorum Datur tibi pretium Iocundare Super adjutrice tua discordia Quae erupit de puteo Infernalis abyssi Vt accumulentur tibi Multa pecuniarum praemia Habes quod semper sitisti Decanta canticum Quia per malitiam hominum Non per tuam religionem Orbem vicisti Ad te trahit homines Non ipsorum devotio Aut pura conscientia Sed scelerum multiplicium perpetratio Et litium decisio Pretio comparata c. Ex Catalog test ver lib 16. This is expounded of the frequent gadding to Rome in the days of Pope Innocentius the III. See pag. 317. 8. Thore 8. There is extant a constitution of Lewes surnamed the blessed King A protestation against the Pope's Bull and an appeal of France bearing the date An. 1228. sub tit de Taliis wherein he regrateth the avarice of Popes saying The exactions and grievous burthens of moneys that are laid on the Churches of our Kingdom by the Court of Rome and whereby the Kingdom is miserably exhausted and more yet may be by burthens which are said to be lately imposed We will that these be levied upon no condition nor gathered except onely for a reasonable pious and most urgent or inevitable necessity and by our express and willing consent and with the consent of the Church it self of our Kingdom At that time the Senate of Paris did present unto John Santroman the King's Advocate the Pope's Bull to be read and answered He replied saying The greatest confusion of all things would arise upon the accepting and comprobation of that Bull for by Authority of such in former times the people of the Kingdom had in great number gone out of the Kingdom unto Rome of whom some became slaves or clients to the Cardinals and some living more liberally had wasted their patrimony idly and others in the City or by the way had perished with the inconvenience of the air and frequent pestilence and so France was exhausted of subjects especially of the learned men He sheweth also how vast sums of money were carried away for vacancies and avowsancies of Bishopricks and Abbeys and other titles in the Church so that sometimes ten or twelve Bulls were sold for one Priesthood and if this custom shall continue said he it shall come to pass that who hath any store of moneys will send to Rome and buy a Priesthood unto his Son or Cousin The Rector of the University of Paris spake to the same purpose and having protested at length against the Bull he appealeth from the iniquity thereof unto the next Councel Brut. Fulmen ex Chronic. Britan. Armoric lib. 4. 9. And because we have heard a little of the exactions which the Court Romish Simony laid upon the Nations to make this more clear I will add from the same Brut. Fulmen pag. 66 67. an example of France there the Author saith It is most certain two sorts of simoniacal merchandise of those things that are called spiritual are exercised at Rome by the Pope one whereby Priesthoods are sold openly without dissimulation and that is very gainful another not so lucrative but no less abominable which is called Taxa poenitentiariae Apostolicae The names and titles of the former are innumerable but of such a multitude the principal are reckoned The tribute of Annates or vacancies by this word is understood a years revenue which is paid unto the holy treasury of the Pope and these are often doubled or tribled Item the tribute by
and Lordships and if any wise man gain-say the open errors of Antichrist and teach men to give their alms to poor needy men to escape the pains of Hell and to gain the bliss of Heaven he shall be imprisoned as a man of unchristian belief and traitor to God and Christian Kings and Lords And whereas King Hezekiah was busie to cleanse God's house and put away all uncleanness from the Sanctuary ..... some Christians Lords in name and Heathens in conditions defile the Sanctuary of God and bring in simoniacal Clarks full of covetousness and heresie and hypocrisie and malice to stop God's Law that it be not known and kept or freely preached and some Christian Lords keep many Prelats and Curats in their Courts and in secular offices openly against God's Law and mans and withhold them from their ghostly office and helping of Christian souls ...... let these unwise Lords know that Eli the Prophet one only had the truth of God and King Ahab with 850 Priests and Prophets of Baal had the false part and after Micheas one alone Prophet of God had the truth against 400 Prophets of Baal that counselled Achab to war to his own shame and death so now a few poor men and Idiots in comparison of School-Clarks may have the truth of holy Scripture against many thousand Prelates and religious that be given to worldly pride covetousness simony hypocrisie and other fleshly sins and the rather seeing poor men desire only the truth and freedom of the holy Gospel and Scripture and accept mans law and ordinances only in as much as they be grounded on holy Scripture or good reason and common profit of Christian people ...... But it is to be feared full sorely that Kings and Lords now have been in the former sins of Manasses God grant that they repent verily and make amends to God and man as he did in the end And near the end of that Chapter he saith Now in England it is a common protection against persecution of Prelates and some Lords if a man be accustomed to swear needless false and unadvised oaths by the bones nails and sides and other members of Christ and be proud and letcherous and speak not of God's Law and reprove not sin about him and to abstain from needless oaths and not lawful and to reprove sin by way of charity is cause enough why Prelates and some Lords slander men and call them Lollards Hereticks raisers of debate and treason against the King ...... How much blood have Lords shed in wars for pride and covetousness by counsel of false Prelates Confessors and Preachers it passeth mans wit to tell fully in this life but of shedding blood and slaying poor men by withdrawing alms and giving it to dead stocks or stones or to rich Clarks and feigned religious were to speak now if a man had the spirit of ghostly strength now men kneel and pray and offer fasts to dead Images that have neither hunger nor cold and despise beat and slay Christian men what honoring of God is this c. The Bishops and Friers could not endure such doctrine but so long as Edward the III. lived he was safe for that King loved him and as some write the above named Acts were by his information máde against the Pope and Prelates when the King became old and unable his second Son John Duke of Lancaster was Regent for the King 's eldest Son was dead and his Son Richard was yong he approved the doctrine of Christ which Wickliff did teach so did Henry Percey Lord Marshal William Rigge Chancellor of the University and many more of account Simon Langham Arch-Bishop of Canterbury summoned him to appear at Lambeth An. 1376. The Duke of Lancaster went with him and the contention was great yet nothing was done against him at that time In the beginning of the reign of Richard the II. John the Regent and the Lord Marshal gave up their Offices then the Bishops thought to have the more advantage against Wickliff Nevertheless he continued preaching 1. The holy Eucharist after consecration is not the body of Christ but figuratively or sacramentally 2. The Church of Rome is not the head of all Churches nor had Peter any more power given him by Christ then any other Apostle had 3. The Pope hath no more power of the keys then any other within the order of Priesthood hath 4. If God be temporal Princes may lawfully and justly take their temporalities from Church-men sinning habitualiter 5. The Gospel is a rule sufficient by it self to rule the life of all Christians here c. These and such other Articles were brought to Pope Gregory the XI by him and twenty three Cardinals they were condemned as heretical And the Pope sent his Bulls unto the University to Simon the Arch-Bishop and unto the Bishop of London that they should apprehend the Heretick as he spoke he wrote also unto the King to assist the Bishops A convocation was held at Lambeth where Wickliff appeared professing himself to be a true Christian he explained the Articles and he denied some to be his assertions saying they had wrested his words At that time whether the Queen-Mother had discharged the Bishops to do him violence as some write or that the Londoners took his part as others say or both he was dismissed only they charged him that he should preach no more of that doctrine The Schism of the Antipopes gave some respite unto Wickliff and Simon was slain in a dissension between the Nobility and the Commons His Successor William Courtney was more fully against him and prevailed so with the King to banish him and in the fifth year of the yong King procured an Act that Hereticks as it pleased them to speak should be imprisoned until they justified their cause This Act mentioneth great numbers of them throughout all the Kingdom convening to Sermons in Churches Church-yards market-Market-places and other places where are great assemblings of people Philip Repington a Batchelor of Divinity had been summoned for the same doctrine but after this Act he forsook it and became Bishop of Lincoln and a cruel persecutor of the truth which he had professed John Ashton also fell away Nicolas Herford another Batchelor made his appeal from the Bishop unto the King and his Council but William caused him to be apprehended and imprisoned he escaped and continued preaching as before John Wickliff in the time of his banishment wrote unto Pope Urban a confession of his faith wherein he affirmeth that seeing the Bishop of Rome calleth himself the Vicar of Christ of all men he is most bound to follow the Law of Christ in the Gospel since the greatness among Christ's Disciples consisteth not in worldly honors but in exact imitation of Christ in life and doctrine and he advised the Pope to leave unto the Secular Powers all temporal rule as Christ did and he prayed that he and his Cardinals might follow the Lord Jesus and faithfully teach
and reward do flatter the Popes and teach new doctrines and are not ashamed to say That the Pope is not subject unto the authority of an holy Councel and the Pope may judge all and be judged of none but should be left unto the judgment of God only even although he draw after him souls by droves into Hell They consider not that these be the words of Popes inlarging their own phylacteries or of their flatterers And because these words are easily refuted they run unto the words of Christ not regarding the meaning of the Spirit but the fancies of their own brain and the prattle of the words Thou art Cephas by these they will make the Pope the head of the Church And I will give thee the keys And I have praied for thee And Whatsoever thou shalt bind on Earth And Feed my Sheep And Cast thy self into the Sea And Thou shalt be a Fisher of men And Christ commanded to pay Tribute for him and him All which these men do wonderfully proclaim but they do altogether despise the Expositions of the holy Teachers c. Aene. Sylvius in his Comment de gestis Concil lib. 1. makes oft use of this Oration 17. In the same Councel Lewis Cardinal of Arelatensis did maintain these positions More credit is to be given unto a private Presbyter if he have better warrant of Scripture or reason than unto a Pope or whole Councel Councels have erred and have been corrected and contented to be directed by a Presbyter as the most famous Councel of Nice was by Athanasius when he was a Presbyter Councels consist not only of Bishops but of Presbyters also for in the Councel of Chalcedon are said to have been 600. Priests which is a name common to Bishops and Presbyters and in other Councels they seak neither of Bishos nor Priests but of Fathers which is also a common name And the power of the keys is given unto the whole Church in Bishops and Presbyters and now according to the teslimony of Hierom Bishops are above Presbyters by custom rather than by constitution for even Paul calleth Presbyters Bishops in his Epistle to Titus These that are called Bishops stand in aw of Kings for their worldly wealth more than of God for their souls whereas the multitude of Presbyters here present despise the world and their life for the love of the truth He insisteth much on this point because Antonius Panormitan would not give a decisive voice unto the Priests Aen. Sylvius ibid. 18. Paul Episc Burgensis and Spanish Orator whom Aen. Sylvius calleth Decus Praelatorum held in that Councel that a Councel is above the Pope and when it is lawfully assembled even without his consent he hath not power to dissolve discharge or adjourn it This he proves by the Law of God and of Man at last he useth an argument from natural reason and testimony of Aristotle and said In all well established Kingdoms that is chiefly looked unto that the Kingdom may do more than the King if it be contrary wise it is not a Kingdom but a Tyranny It is so with the Church she should have more power than the Pope Whereupon Sylvius writes more fully saying The Pope is in the Church as a King in his Kingdom but it is absurd that a King hath more power than all his Kingdom therefore the Pope should not have more power than the Church But as sometimes Kings for their evil administration and Tyranny are excluded from the whole Kingdom so without doubt the Roman Pope may be deposed by the Church that is by a general Councel In this matter I make no account of them who give so large Power unto Kings as if they were tied unto no Laws those are but flatterers and prattle otherwise then they think For although it be said Moderation is always in the Prince that is to be understood when there is reason to decline from the words of the Law He is a King who watcheth over and procureth the common good who delighteth in the prosperity of the Subjects and who in all things he doth aimeth at the welfare of his people and if he do not so he may be called not a King but a Tyrant looking only unto his own interest ...... If we see a King dispising Laws robbing his Subjects deflouring Virgins and doing all things at his pleasure will not the Peers of the Land conveen put him away and advance another who shall swear to rule by Laws So reason and experience do teach The same should be in the Church that is in the Councel and so it is manifest that the Pope is subject unto the Councel saith Sylvius 19. A Greek Abbot had a Sermon at that Councel and began thus Lo Souldiers cast away the works of darkness There he rebuketh the Clergy that they had lost their spiritual armor and he exhorteth the Fathers to Reform the Clergy or else the Church will perish Catal. test ver 20. James de Guitrod a Carthusian lived about the year 1440. among other Books he wrote De septem statibus Ecclesiae in Apocalypsi descriptis There he accuseth the Pope and his Court that they do continually hinder the Reformation of the Church and that they do alwaies tremble at the naming of a Councel He wrote another Book De errorib Christianorum modernis where he noteth not onely the vices of People and Clergy but their Idolatry their Pilgrimages and gadding to Images their Miracles feigned for avarice He saith Christian Religion is in derision with Infidels because of so many impieties and vanities of Christians Men accept and love one another for their works but God accepteth the work for the man and therefore every man should first indeavor to be reconciled unto God before he can hope that his works can be accepted In another Book De causis remedus passionum he rebuketh the pride of Prelates and saith plainly They have the place of Antichrist and not of Christ and their pride is the pride of Lucifer 21. John Gochius Priest of Mechlin then avouched that the writings of Albe●tus Thomas and other Sophists taken from the muddy channels of Philosophy do more obscure then inlighten the truth they fight against the Canonical truth and against themselves they smell of the Pelagian Heresie The Scriptures should be followed and all other writings should be examined by them even the Decrees of Popes and Councels Monkish vows are not profitable unto godliness and are contrary unto Christian liberty Works are not satisfactory unto God's justice but we are justified through the only mercy of God by faith in Christ and not by our deservings Sin remaineth in the godly but is not imputed unto them and is forgiven for Christ He refuteth them who do mince sin in the godly Catal. test ver lib. 19. 22. Nicolaus Cusanus Bishop of Brixia is by Aen. Sylvius called Hercules of Pope Eugenius and he lamenteth that so noble a head had strayed into the
Idols Silvester the II. did worse ...... The Church which is represented by the Councel is the Mother of all Believers and therefore the Mother of the Pope and she is so called by Anacletus and Calixtus The Church is the Spouse of Christ and the Pope is but his Vicar now the Vicar cannot be superiour unto the Spouse but rather obedient unto her Sylvius lib. cit The result of the Diets was that in respect of the person and place of Eugenius the Councel should be intreated to surcease from process against him After great concertation an Act was past in the great Congregation May 15. concluding the first three Truths And unto that Request they published their Answer January 17. An. 1438. The sum is Because Pope Eugenius will not repent of his wicked attempt unless he be suspended from his administration so now since he hath sinned more hainously they have no hope that he will repent for simple intreating therefore they will proceed to his deposition yet not hastily but as they have allowed more then due space of citation so after he is suspended they will delay his deprivation and wait his amendment His citation was upon ninety days Then came forth the Acts of the Councel of Ferraria against the Councel of Basil and the Acts of this against the other as they be annexed unto the Councel of Basil In Session 34. June 25. An. 1439. Pope Eugenius alias Gabriel being convicted of notorious contumacy of disobedience unto the commands of the Church universal of continual contemning the Canons of the Councels of disturbing the peace of God's Church of Simony Perjury Schism Heresie ...... was simpliciter deprived of the Papacy And in Session 39. in November immediately following Amadaeus Duke of Savoy who had been an Eremite in Ripalia a Wilderness in the Diocy Gebennen was chosen Pope and called Felix the V. After that nothing was done but for defense of the Councel Answers were published refuting the libels of Pope Eugenius and his Councel it were were wearisome to relate all yet I shall hint at one Reply dated October 7. An. 1439. After the Preface whereas Eugenius said The Authority of Councels above the Pope was established only by the faction of Pope John the XXIII They say All the Fathers consented in Councel deposing two Popes and electing a third And Pope Martin with consent of the whole Councel defined it to be an errour if any dare say that it is not of the necessity of salvation to believe that the Church of Rome is supream among all Churches if by the Church of Rome be understood the Church universal or General Councel Item When any shall be suspected of the Heresies of Wickliff he should be demanded Whether he believe that whatsoever the Councel of Constance hath defined concerning Faith and Salvation should be approved and held by all Believers and yet Martin was not ignorant of the former Act And in this Councel at Basil the same was renewed when there was no difference of factions In the end they compare Eugenius unto the Jews Donatists Arians and other Hereticks who were wont to call the better part Hereticks divellish and separated from the true Church so doth Eugenius now c. IV. The fourth principal purpose of that Councel was the Reformation of the Church according to the Act of Session 41. at Constance So in Session 12. it was ordained That every Church and Monastery should chuse their own Prelate without any reservation to the Roman Pope but onely of those places that are under the Roman Church in respect of Dominion In Session 15. Every Bishop should have a Synod twice or at least once every year which shall continue two or three days or longer as seemeth good unto him and there he shall admonish his own Clergy of their general and particular duties he should diligently inquire of their manners he should exhort them unto good manners and direct those who have charge of souls to instruct their people with wholesome doctrine and admonitions the Provincial Statutes should be read and any compendious Treatise concerning the administration of the Sacraments and other things conducing to the instruction of Priests he should by due correction beat down simony usury and fornication and revoke the dilapidations of Church-goods he should reform the abuses of the Clergy and other people so far as concerneth Divine Service and especially he should take heed that his Diocy be not infected with heresie errours scandals lottery divination inchantation superstition or any other divellish device Item In every Province shall be a Provincial Synod within two years after this Councel and after that a Provincial Synod every third year where all the Arch-Bishops and all the Suffragans and all quorum interest should be present where an Arch-Bishop or one in his name should have the Exhortation admonition shall be that Benefices and Orders should be bestowed on the worthiest without simony and that mature examination be had of such as the cure of souls is committed unto and that Church-goods be not abused it should be inquired how Bishops bestow Benefices and confirm Elections and preach unto their People and punish the vices of their Subjects observe the Episcopal Synods and discharge other parts of their Office It shall also be inquired of the Metropolitan in all these particulars if any contentions arise to disturb the peace of a Province the Synod should indeavour to settle them if such discords arise between Kingdoms or Princedoms the Bishops should assemble Synods in both and concur one with another to take away the occasion of these discords respecting only the glory of God and welfare of the People In the Provincial Synods it shall be advised what is to be propounded in the insuing General Councel In Session 20. It is not necessary to forsake the company of excommunicated persons unless the Sentence be laid and published against such a certain person or persons expresly and their cause can have no tergiversation nor excuse by Law Item That no City nor place can be subject unto Ecclesiastical Interdiction but for the fault of the Governours of that place not for the fault of a private or any forraign person Item No appellations should be made after the first being annulled In Session 21. Annates should not be required by the Roman Church nor elsewhere for confirmation of Election nor for a Collation In other Sessions Statutes were made concerning the Service in the Mass the election and profession of Priests the number and quality of Cardinals and reservation of cases unto Rome In Session 30. An. 1437. Laicks are not tied by the command of Christ to communicate of both bread and wine but the Church hath power to direct how it should be administred ..... that whether they communicate in one kinde or in both according to the Ordinance of the Church it is profitable to salvation unto the worthy Communicant yet the laudable custom of the Church should be observed
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
a Model of presbyterian gouvernment was drawn up and Elders were chosen again This was setled by consent of the Senate so that from the Sentence of the Presbytery it should not be lawfull either for Minister or people to recede Though both Senat and the people did agree thereunto as consonant unto Gods worde yet some not only of the people but even of the chief men did manifest their dislyke of it yea some Ministers which afterwards were found guilty of some wickednesses though they did not openly oppose it yet under hand they wrought against it pretending the example of other Churches where no excommunication was used and some cryed out that it would introduce again a Popish tyranny But he overcame these difficulties by shewing that not only the true doctrine but discipline also must be warranted by the Worde of God and that this hath the approbation of the most learned men of that age as Oecolampade Zuinglius Bucer Melanthon Capito c. which he proved out of their books and telling them that other Churches were not to be condemned which had not proceeded so far nor those Ministers which had found that their people needed not such censure and lastly shewing a vast difference between the Popish tyranny and the easy yoke of the Lord. So that at last the discipline was establisht Novemb. 20. 1541. Nevertheles some loose men would not be tied unto that Discipline but sought to break it especially in the year 1546 Amedius Perrin and ambitious man could not endure Caluins thunderings against his lasciviousness and began to discover what he and his associats had for a time been contriving The Senate took notice of him he held him silent a while but the contrived wickedness brake out more openly for one of the Senate blamed Caluin of falle doctrine The cause was heard before the Senate and that Senatour was condemned of slander and two Ministers which had set him on were conuicted of drunkenness and removed out of their places Caluin shews still that the life of Christianity consists not so much in profession of truth as in the practise of godliness Then Perrin and his associats do appeal from the Presbytery unto the Senate The Presbytery pleadeth their Constitutions agreeable unto Gods worde and setled by autority and therefore that their priviledges might not be infringed The Senate granteth that it should be so and because Perrin would not be ruled they depose him from his Captainship An. 1547. but the next year he was restored by the prevalency of his friends In the year 1552. one Berteler was suspended from the sacrament for sundry faults he craves that the Senate would absolve him Caluin in name of the Presbytery oppones shewing that the Magistrate should preserve and not destroy good discipline of the Church But the false calumnies of the adversary pretending that the Presbytery did encroach upon the authority of the Magistrate prevailed so that in the Common-Councel it was decreed that the last appeal ought to be unto the Senate who might absolve whom they thought fit So Berteler gote Letters of absolution confirmed with the publick seal Then Perrin and his associats hoped for one of two either that Caluin would not obey this mandate and so he would be oppressed by the people or els if he did obey it were easy to contemn the Presbytery and they might follow their licenciousness Caluin understood this but two dayes before the administration of the sacrament in September and in his Sermon when he had spoken much against the profaners of the sacrament said I following Chrysostome will rather suffer myself to be slain then this my hand shall reach the holy elements to those who have been judged contemners of God These words did so prevaile though the men were head strong that Perrin sent privatly unto Berteler and advised him not to obtrude himself upon the sacrament So it was peaceably administed through Gods mercy In the afternoon Caluin preached on Acts 20 where Paul took his leave of the Ephesians and professed that he would neither oppose nor teach others to oppose the Decree of the Magistrates and he exhorted the Congregation to continue in that Doctrine which they had received and seeing said he things are come to this passe give mee leave Brethren to use the words of the Apostle unto you I commend you to God and the words of his grace These words daunted the wicked wonderfully and prevailed much with them all The next day the Common-Counsel was assembled and the whole Presbytery entreated that they might be heard in giving reasons for abrogating the forenamed Act concerning the Appeal This was assented their mindes being much changed and it was decreed that the Act should be suspended and that the judgement of the four Helvetian Churches should be craved therein and in the mean time nothing should be done prejudiciall to the Lawes formerly established Thus the faction was diverted from Caluin but afterwards they sought to bring the storm on Farell who in these dayes came from Neocom into Geneva and in a Sermon sharply reproved the factious partly knowing the equity of the cause and partly relying upon his authority which he had formerly amongst them When he was gone that faction complained that he had done them wrong and procured that one was sent unto the Senate of Neocom to cause Farell appeare at a day appointed Farell came again to Geneva not without danger for that faction cryed out that he deserved to be thrown into the river An honest young man said to Perrin that Farell the common Father of the City should not be wronged and he with another Citizen took upon them to stand by Farell at the day of hearing His adversaties were astonished and of their own accord craved pardon So Farell was dismissed Then came answer from the four Helvetian Cities who unanimously confirmed the Ecclesiastical Policy as it had been before established Behold here what sort of men did oppose the Presbyterian Discipline to wit loose and ambitious men XLI Francis 2. King of France did maintain James Faber and his Persecution in France Printer against the Sobonists and he professed a desire of Reformation when he sought aleagve with the Protestants at Smalcald nevertheless he would not have the Pope to judge so of him and therefore he continued in persecuting them which were for Reformation Who can tell all the barbarities that were committed in France from the year 1538. untill the year 1589. yet for exampls sake we will touch some In that year 1538. Aprile 13. a young gentleman of Tolouse was burnt at Paris for eating eggs in Lent Remarkable was that horrible impiety An. 1545. against the Waldenses in Merindole Cabriers When those heard of the Reformation in Germany they were glade and sent for some preachers by whom they received clearer information and with more courage did avowe the faith of their ancestours They were delated for rebellion against the King and this
Caspar Contaren Reynold Poole Peter Bembus and Frederik Fregosius who all were sensible that the Church needed some Reformation Then Martyr was restored to his liberty of preaching but could not enjoy it long time for he became dangerously sick and by the advice of Physicians the Superiors of his order seeing that the air of that City did not agree with him made him General Visitor of the Order In that Office he so demeaned himself that good men much commended his integrity constancy and gravity and others feared him yet durst not discover their malice Not long after in a publick Convention of that Order he was made Prior of a Monastery in Luca some consented unto this promotion out of love others thinking it would be his ruine because of an enmity between Florence and Luca. But he engaged the hearts of the people there that he was no less beloved then if he had been born among them In that Colledge were many learned men and hopefull youths and he took care that the younger sort were instructed in the three languages for which end he had Paul Lacisius of Verona to read Latine Celsus Martinengus to read Greek and Immanuel Tremellius the Hebrew and for Divinity he himself daily expounded the Epistles of Paul and every night before supper he expounded a part of the Psalms Very many of the City of the Senators and Nobility resorted unto his Lecturs and he preached publickly every Lords day The enemies of the trueth could not endure him and laid snares for him nor could conceil their malice When he was admonished by his friends he chused to leave them and went to Strawsburgh What fruit his teaching brought forth may be known by this that in one years space after his departure eighteen Fellowes of that Colledge left it and went into the Reformed places among whom was Celsus Martinengus afterwards Minister of the Italian Church in Geneva Hieron Zanchius Im. Tremellius c. Many Citizens also went into exile voluntarily that they might enjoy the trueth in safety Ex Vita ●e Martyris Another instance was in Bonnonia in the year 1554. the Popes Governours attempted to make innovations there which the people would not receive contrary to their former Lawes The Innovators said They were not tied to former Lawes but had authority from the Pope who is King of the Countrey and may change statutes and ordinances without consent of the people Against this tyranny both the learned men and the people opposed themselves and in the Monastry of the black Friers was a generall Convention where Thomas de Finola Rector of the University set forth this Position All Rulers whether Supreme or Inferiour may and should be reformed or bridled to speak moderatly by them by whom they are chosen confirmed or admitted to their Office so oft as they break that promise made by oath unto their subjects Because the Prince is no less bound by oath unto their subjects then are the subjects unto their Prince and it should be kept and reformed equally according to Law and condition of the oath that is made by either party Vicen●ius de Placentia sustained this Position And when all reasons that the Popes Governors could alledge were heard the Pope was fain to take up the matter and did promise not only to keep the liberty of the people but that he should neither abrogate any antient Statute nor make any new one without their consent The Histor of the Reformation of Scotland Pag 399 edit Edinburgh 1644. which was writen by Jo. Knox albeit somesentences have been added by another after him At that time John Craig a Scotish man who afterwards was Minister of Edinburgh of whom mention is made hereafter was a Monk and considering the common doctrin of justification by works did not approve it and shewed unto an old Monk his arguments in the contrary The old man said It is true as you say but be silent lest you fall into danger for the dayes are evill But such was the mans zeal unto trueth that he could not contain himself and for this and other things that he taught he was carried to Rome and cast into prison with many hundreds more in the time of Paul 3 but they all escaped that night of the Popes death when the Citizens broke up the prisons XLIX John a Lasco a Noble man of Poland intending to see other Nations went to Zurik there he was easily perswaded by Zuinglius to betake himself Reformation in Poland to the studie of Divinity and where as he might have been advanced unto honour in his native Countrey yet such was his love to Christ and hatred to Popery that he choosed to embrace that Religion which hath it's soundation upon the Word of God In the year 1542. he was called to be Pastor at Embden the next year Anna the widow Countess of Oldenburgh invites him to reforme the Churches there which he endeavoured with great diligence Afterwards Edward King of England sent by information of Cranmer for him to be Preacher unto a Dutch Church at London In the first year of Queen Mary he obtained leave to return beyond sea a great part of his Congregation went with him and Martin Micron another Preacher to Copenhagen but the King would not suffer them to stay within his kingdoms unless they would embrace the doctrine of Luther concerning the local presence of Christs body and use the ceremonies ordained by him For the same cause they were refused by the Hans-towns and Churches of Saxony At last that vexed congregation was received at Embden Then he would visite his own Countrey after twenty years absence there he found many affecting a Reformation but few Preachers The Popish clergy sought by all means to destroy him or to have him bannished and they accused him unto the King for an heretick The King said Though they called him an heretick yet the States had not decerned so and he was ready to cleare himself from such imputations In the year 1557. a Parliament was assembled at Warsaw there was great contention for Religion The Princes whom they call Vaivodes crave that the Augustan Confession should be established The Bishops strove against it so that the Princes could not obtain any liberty Nevertheless after the Parliament they caused the Gospel to be preached in their own Provinces without the Kings permission John á Las●o impugned the doctrine of the local presence and caused the trueth which the adversaries called Calvinisme to be received by many and unto this day that Church is miserably rent the King and most part are Popish many are Anabaptists few are Ubiquitaries yet a great many hold constantly the sounder Trueth L. When the Kings of Spain had subdued the Sarracens who had continued The Reformation in the Netherlands there some hundred years and expelled them out of the realm many of them not willing to leave the countrey fained themselves to be Christians and afterwards they were convinced to despise
for he makes convocation of the people to hear praier and Sermon almost dayly and whatever your Ma. or others think of it we think it no treason The Queen Hold your peace let him answer for himself Knox I began to reason with the Secretary whom I take to be a better Logician than your Ma. is that all convocation is not unlawfull and now my Lord Ruthuen hath given the instance which if your Ma. will deny I shall make myself ready to prove The Queen I will say nothing against your Religion nor conveening to your Sermons but what authority have you to convocate my subjects when you will without my commandement Knox I have no pleasure to decline from my former purpose but to satisfy your two questions Madam I answer that at my will I never conveened four persons in Scotland but at the Order that the Brethren had appointed I have given diverse advertisements and great multituds have assembled thereupon And if your Ma. complaines that this was done without your Ma. command So hath all that God hath blessed within this realm from the beginning of this action and therefore I must be convinced by a just law that I have done against the duty of Gods Messinger in writing this Letter before that I be either sory or repent for the doing of it as my Lord Secretary would persuade mee for what I have done it is at the commandement of the Generall Church within this realm and therefore I think I have done no wrong The Queen you shall not escape so is it not treason my Lords to accuse a Prince of cruelty I think Acts of Parliament may be found against such whifperers Many do grant that this is true Knox But wherein can I be accused The Queen Read this part of your Letter This fearfull summons is directed against them to make no doubt a preparation upon a few that a door may be opened to execute cruelty upon a greater multitude What say you to that Knox is it lawfull Madam to answer for myself or shall I be condemned before I be heard The Queen Say what you can I think you have enough a do Knox I will first desire of your Ma. and of this honourable audience Whither your Ma. Knoweth not that the obstinate Papists are deadly enemies to all that professe the Evangell of Jesus Christ and that they most earnestly desire the extirpation of them all and of the true doctrine which is taught within this realme The Queen held her peace but all the Lords with common voice said God forbid that either the life of the faithfull or the staying of the doctrine stood in the power of the Papists for experience hath taught us what cruelty is in their hearts Knox I proceed then seing I perceive that all will grant that it were a barbarous cruelty to destroy such a multitude as professe the Evangell of Jesus Christ within this realm which they have attempted to do by force once or twice as things done of late dayes do testify whereof they being by Gods providence disapointed have invented more crafty dangerous practises to wit to make the Prince pa●ty under colour of law and so what they could not do by open force they shall perform by crafty deceit for who thinks my Lords that the insatiable cruelty of the Papistes within this realm I meane shall end in the murthering of these two now unjustly summoned and more unjustly to be accused I think no man of judgement can so esteem but rather the direct contrary that is by this few number they intend to prepare a way to their bloody enterprise against all and therefore Madam cast up when you list the Acts of your Parliaments I have offended nothing against them for in my Letter I accuse not your Majesty nor yet your nature of cruelty but I affirm yet again thas the pestilent Papists which have enflammed your Ma. without cause against these poor men are the sones of the devill and therefore must obey the desires of their father who hath been a murtherer from the beginning Onesaid you forget yourself you are not in the pulpit Knox I am in the place where I am commanded in my conscience to speak the truth and the truth I speak impugne it who so listeth And heer unto I add Madam that honest meek gentle natures in appearance may be by wicked corrupt counselers changed altered to the direct contrary exempls wee have of Nero whom in the beginning of his empire we find having naturall shame but after his flatterers had incouraged him in all impiety alledging that nothing was either unhonest or unlawfull in his person who was Emperour above others when he had drunk of this cup I say to what enormites he fell the histories bear witnes And now Madam to speak plain Papists have your ears patent all times assure your Ma. they are dangerous counselers and that your Mother did find The Queen Well you speak fair heer before my Lords but the last time I spake with you Secretly you caused mee to weep many tears And so was a rehearsing of what was spoken in the Cabinet when John Erskin was present After the Secretary had conferred with the Queen he said Mr. Knox you may return to your house for this night Knox I thank God and the Queen's Majesty and Madam I pray God to purge your heart from Papistry and to preserve you from the Counsell of flatterers for howsoever they seem pleasant to your ears and corrupt affections for the time experience hath taught into what perplexity they have brought famous Princes The Queen reteereth to her cabinet John Knox went home The Counsell voteth uniformly that they could find no offense The Queen is brought again and commandeth to vote over again All did refuse to vote over again The next day a new assault was made on J. Knox to confesse an offence and put himself in the Queen's will with this assurance that his greatest punishment should be but to go within the castle of Edinburgh and immediatly he shall return to his house He said God forbid that by my confession I condemn these Noble men who in their conscience and in displeasure of their Queen have absolved mee and further I am assured ye will not in earnest desire mee to confesse an offense unless thereby ye would desire mee to cease from preaching for how can I exhort others to peace if I confesse myself an authour of sedition Histo of Reformation Lib. 4. On December 25. the sixth Nationall Assembly conveenes The VI. National Assembly in Edinburgh where were many Noble men the Superintendents c. John Willock Superintendent of the West is ●hosen Moderator The petitions of the Ministers and Commissioners were despised by some Counselers with these words As Ministers will not follow our counsell so will we suffer Ministers to labour for themselves and see what speed they come The Noble men said if the Queen will not
the French Bishops had foughten a long time The Councel's authority is above the Pope and he might have helped it easily if he had vsed the phrase of the Apostle The care of all the Churches 2 in prejudice of the Councels authority he had permitted in all the decrees a reservation of the authority of the Apostolical See and the craving of confirmation of the decrees And sundry other particulares As also the Centumviral Court of Paris obiected other particulares but all concerning those which were called The articles of Reformation His defense was What could he and sixe Prelats do against 200. and there was a special Act that nothing was done in prejudice of the liberties of France Vidus Faber replied that he and his Colleague had diligently sought that Act but could not find it and in humane affaires not to appear is not to bee But all those obiections were nothing to what the Bishops and Divines and their servants told scurrilously of the contentions and factions of the Fathers and their particular designes and generally This Councel was of more authority then the Councel of the Apostles seing these defined nothing but what seemed good unto the Holy Ghost and this Synod layd the foundation of their decrees visum est nobis In Germany both Papists and Protestants obiected more against the canons of doctrine as they command the Bishop to teach wholesom doctrine of purgatory without any declaration what that doctrine is The Councel was assembled especially for the grievances against indulgences and they had defined nothing but wish moderation according to the antient and approved custom of the Church albeit in the Eastern Churches was never use of those indulgences nor in the Western before Vrban 2. or the year 1095. so far as any man can find and after that untill the year 1300. was litle use of them or but for freedom of the Confessar's iniunctions Likewise the Emperour and the Duke of Bavier sent Letters severally unto Rome craving liberty of the cup and of marriage unto the Priests And the clergy of Germany sent third remonstrance shewing a necessity of granting liberty of marriage by authority of the old and new Testament and the practise of the primitive Church and of the Eastern Church unto this day as it was never more necessary then at this time when amongst fifty priests one scarcely can be found who is not a notorious whoor-monger and it is absurd to permitt whoorish priests and exclude the marryed and to exclude them both were as if you would have none The Pope referred these Letters unto the consideration of the Cardinals and they would not ●eeld March 12. the Pope promoted 19 Cardinals in reward of their service in the Councel unto the Apostolicall See and he would not promote any who had spoken for residence of Bishops or that their institution is De Jure Divino So far Pe. Soave in Hist. Conti. Trident. Likewise Ge. Abbot writting against Hill in Reas 9. shewes out of Declarat du Roy de Navarr that Charles IX sent his Ambassadors and Bishops unto Trent with large instructions for reformation of the clergy but when nothing could be obtained he caused his Ambassadors protest against the Councel and return home So they did and those Bishops came also away and nevertheless amongst the subscribers is mention of 26 French Prelats as if they had subscribed There it is also that after the Massacre in the year 1572. some thinking that to be an opportunity of seeking confirmation of the Synod did propound it but it was refused in all the Chambers The like motion was made An. 1585. and with the same happ The Reformed wrot against the decrees namely Calvin wrote his Antidotum against the Acts under Pope Paul and Chemnitius wrote against them all and calleth them a horrible chaos of monstrous errors Here by anticipation it may be added that the Jesuits were employd as stout champions at Rhems Doway and Lovan to maintain the decrees who carried themselves so happely that for defense of these errors they vented many others that were scarcely heard before lastly Card. Bellarmin as the chief champion and others of that colledge at Rome were commanded by Pope Gregory XIII to bring all the controversies into one body or system That work brought forth by the providence of God a threefold benefit unto posterity 1. A more perfect body of Popish errors then ever was published before 2. A manifest proof of the jarrings and divisions of the Doctors in the Roman Church for albeit they glory of Unity among themselves yet in every controversy almost yea very few excepted the contrary judgement of their Doctors is brought expressely 3. Albeit all the errors of Trent are maintained there exprofesso and many errors are falsly imputed unto Luther Calvin and others yet there the reformed Church is fairly cleared from many errors which other Papists impute falsly unto us and more over somtimes in sifting and stating a question he maintaines what we hold and refutes another and maintaines what he denied in the proper place and by those two meanes he gives testimony unto the truth in all the chief controversies as Jo. Ernest Gerhard hath collected in his Book Bellarminus ORTHODOXIAS testis And about that time came forth another edition of the Decrees at Trent with references upon the margine of each canon unto other books of the Schoolmen where to find those points handled and those references being published by authority of the Court might serve for a commentary without any change of the decrees if it should be challenged even though the reference be contrary to the decree PART IIJ. CHAP. J. Of POPES J. PIVS 5. Was not inferiour unto any Pope in dissembling in some outward things he made a shew of godliness When he was crouned he said unto the Cardd that they should ask nothing from him that were contrary to equity or to the Councel of Trent He brought some of the Court namely the Penitentiaries and procurators of the Chancelery but not the Cardd into some moderation he most severly discharged all selling of Benefices he restrained the wickednes of priests some what he would have all the Jewes dwell at Rome or Ancona he would have expelled all the professed whoores out of Rome but when the Romanes shew him what a part of his revenues he would want he suffered them in a corner by themselves and appointed unto them their own preachers and thereafter some bordellers were married But in the articles of Religion and idolatrous worship he made no Reformation He gave licence unto Charles an archduke of Austria to mary his sisters-daughter and when Joachim-Frederik son of the Electour of Brandeburg married the daughter of his uncle the Pope rageth partly because he was in the Popes judgement an heretick and partly because he was chosen Primate of Germany and administrator of the episcopall Colledge of Magdeburg without licence of the Pope and then had married his
weak instruments to make his glory so sensibly appear in the Land that I may boldly say Mercy and trueth righteousness and peace had never since Christs coming in the flesh a more glorious meeting and amiable embracing on earth even so that the Church of Scotland justly obtained a name among the chief Churches and Kingdoms of the world A people sitting in darknes hath seen a great light and unto them who sate in the region of death light did spring up As the darknes evanishes at the rising of the Sun so God made all adverse power give way unto these weake instruments by degrees as followes more clearly To what Nation under heaven since the Sunne of righteousness had shined upon the most part of Europe hath the Lord communicated the Gospell for so large a time with such purity prosperity power liberty and peace The hottest persecutions had not greater purity the most halcion times had not more prosperity and peace the best reformed churches in other places scarcely parallelled their liberty and unity And all these with such continuance that not only hath He made the trueth to stay there as He made the Sun to stay in the dayes of Josua But when the cloud of iniquities did threaten a going down in his mercy he hath brought back the glorious sunne by in any degrees Christ not hath only been one and his name made known in respect of his propheticall office for information of his priesthood for the expiation of sins and for intercession But also had displayd his banner and hath shewd himself few can say the like a Soveraigne King in the Land to govern with his own Scepter of the Word to cutt off with the Civill sword all moniments of idolatry and superfluity of vain rites and to restore all the meanes of his Worship in doctrine Sacraments and discipline to the holy simplicity and integrity of the first pattern shewed in the mount from which by that wisdom of man which ever is foolishness with God they were fearfully and shamefully swerving II. Another particulare is Some Noble men namely Lord James Steward and others were very zealous for the Reformation at the first but when they were accustomed with the aire of the Court they cooled were for toleration of the Masse and relented for their preferment as hee was made Earle of Morray and others became officers of State The Ministers admonished them and threatned them for their lukewarmness They despised admonitions and would not use the preachers so familiarly as before they were wont though none of them turned Papist excep the Earle of Bothwell and they heard the preachings When the Queen intended to marry Henry Stuard sone to the Earle of Lennox and sought not the consent of the Parliament they oppose her marriage and therefore were all exiled and fled into England Thus God made the threatnings true but in mercy to the Land he wondrously brought them back when variance fell betwixt the King and Queen the King recalleth the exiled Noble men of purpose to make himselfe the stronger by them And when the King 1567. was murthered on February 9. by the Earle of Bothwel and the Queen married that Earle these same Noble men with other stood in defence of the young Prince that he came not into the hands of him who had killed his father They went to the fields with armies on both sides and the Queen's Army was the stronger but they were strucken with such feare that without stroak of sword the Earle fled away into Denmark and the Queen went to the Lords Juny 11. and renounced the Crown in favors of her sone and did chuse the Earle of Murray to be Regent of the Q. Mary renounced the Cro●n Kingdom enduring her Sone's minority And then the Religion was established as followes So it pleased God to change things beyond the expectation of men VI. Soon after the Queens marriage a proclamation was made wherein the Queen declares that She will confirm all that She had promised at her arrivall concerning the Reformed Religion This was to stop the peoples mouths But all in vain For the people universally were against Bothwell For some declared openly against him some were Neuters and a few of the Nobility did join unto him especially the Bishop of Santandrews and the Earle of Huntly who had been lately restored by the Queen Within few dayes after the Queen came unto the Lords she would have gone from them but they fearing what she might attempt convoy her into the Castle of Lochlevin then the Earle of Glencarn with his domesticks went to the Chappell-Royall and break down the Altars Images This fact did content the zealous Protestants but did offend the Popish party The Histor of Reformat Lib. 5. On Juny 25. The Nationall Assembly conveenes at Edinburgh George Buchanan then The XIII Assembly Principall of S. Leonards Colledge was chosen Moderator 1. The Superintendent of Anguise and Bergany were sent unto the Lords of the Secret Counsell to request their L. L. to conveen with the Assembly and give their assistance in such things as shall be thought good for establishing true Religion and supporting the Ministry 2. It is thought good by all that are conveened that this assembly shall conveen Iuly 20. next to come for setting foreward such things as shall then be propounded and for that purpose ordaines to write Missives to all and sundry Earles Lords and Barons requiring them to conveen at that day And to this effect appoints Commissioners to deliver the Missives and to require answer according to their Commission● The tenor of the Commissions given to every one followes For so much as Satan this long time in his member● had so raged and perturbed the good success proceedings of Christs Religion within this realm by crafty meanes subtile co●spiracyes that the same from time to time doth decay and in hazard to be altogether subverted unles● God of his mercy find hasty remedy and that mainly through extream poverty of the Ministers who should preach the word of life unto the people and are compelled thereby some to leave that Vocation alluterly some others so abstracted that they can not insist so diligently in the exercise of the word as they would Therefore the Church presently conveened in this generall Assembly hath thought it most necessary by these presents to request admonish most brotherly all such persons as do truly professe the Lord JESUS within this realm of whatsoever estate or degree either of the Nobility Barons and Gentle men and all others true professours to conveen in Edinburgh July 21. next in their personall presence to assist with their counsell power for order to be taken alswell toward● the establishing of Christs religion universally throughout the realm and abolishing the contrary which is Papistry as the sustentation of the Ministers not only for the present time and instant necessity but also for a perfect order to be taken and
horning to cease from all proceeding against him to excommunication 8. Blasphemous railing against the Ministers in pulpite since his suspension and oft before And in summamanifest contempt of the ordinance of the Church and stirring up a fearfull schism betwixt some of the Nobility and the Church All which being tryed partly by his own confession partly by the process in the Gen. assembly last in Edinburgh and by the process declared by the Eldership of Sterlin and partly by testification of good and godly brethren was found all to have fallen in his person and him to be culpable thereof for the which hainous and unworthy crimes the Assembly voteth and concludes the said Robert not only unworthy to serve in the Office of the Ministry but to be deprived thereof perpetually the sentence of excommunication to strick upon him unless he prevent the same by repentance The Lord of requests craves that the pronouncing of the said sentence may be delayd untill the King be advertised The Assembly continues their answer till after noon In Sess 9. a letter being written in name of the Ass unto the K. was read and thought good to be delivered unto the Lord of requests whereof here is the tenor Please your Maj. Wee have received your Gr s most loving letter directed unto us by your Gr s Commissioner Mark Ker Mr of requests and are compelled to burst out with most humble thanks unto our good God who of his mercy hath given us ●o godly a King carefull and wel-willing that God be glorified and his Church within your M. realm maintained as plainly appeares by the articles by your G. propounded whereunto with all diligence we began to make answer but in such shortness of time and such strait whereunto we were brought by certain Letters raised at the instance of Mr Robert mongomery wee are altogether stayd in that many other godly actions for upon the. 27. day of this instant the Assembly being occupied in godly and modest reasoning of weighty matters he caused an officer of armes to enter irreverently and under pain of horning commanded the wholl Church from all proceeding against him for whatsoever cause or enormity committed in his wicked attempts A thing that was never heard nor seen since the world began whereof we must lament unto yout Gr. and having no other refuge under God most humbly crave that by these extraordinary charges directed against the word of God and Lawes of your Gr s Countrey we be not constrained either to betray the cause of God by bearing-with and winking at horrible crimes manifest to all men in the person of the said Mr Ro. or to be reput and accounted disobedient to your Majesty in whose service wee have been are and shall be ready to spend our blood lifes Beseeching your Gr. wee may find this grace and favor in your Ma s sight to keep our conscience clean before God and reserve ourselves unto him who hath given us the charge of his inheritance This most reasonably request wee doubt not but to obtain at your Majesty our particular reasons being heard and considered which wee mind by Gods grace more largely to expound by certain brethren directed unto your Majesty and with a full answer unto the foresaid articles In the mean time wee beseech your Ma. not to give eare to the sinistrous report and wrangous information of men who by such dealings go about to draw your Ma. heart from your true faithfull subjects and by this unhappy schism to overthrow the Church of God within your Gr s country and for their own particular gain banish Christ and his word which God of his infinite mercy forbid and preserve your Gr. body and soull for ever From Santandrews Aprile 27. 1580. When this Letter was directed The assembly after voting concerning the sentence to be pronounced against Robert mongomery deprives him from all function of the Ministry in the Church of God during the will of the Assembly and more decerned the sentencce of excommunication to be pronounced in face of the assembly by the voice and mouth of the Moderator present against him to the effect that his proud flesh being casten into the hands of Sathan he may be winne again if it be possible unto God and the said Sentence to be intimated by every particular Minister at his own particular church in his first Sermon to be made by them after their returning The pronunciation of the said Sentence being stayd untill moonday at nyne hours because of the compearance of the said Rob. who hath Ro. Mongomery renounces his appellatiō renounced the appellation interponed by his procurator in his name and by himselfe that day before noon from the sentence of the Church and craves conference to be granted unto him of the most godly and learned brethren this the Church granteth untill moonday at nyne a clock upon condition he remain and wait upon the doctrin and conference of the brethren and make no novation or new charge against the Church He promiseth to attend upon the doctrin and conference of the Brethren the morne all day and he shall neither use nor purchase any new charge in tbe mean time if the Church use none against him And moreover the Assembly ordaines prajers to be made tomorrow after the sermon by him who shall occupy the place for the time In Sess 12. to the end the brethren may know what And submitts to the Assem fruit hath followed upon the Conference with R. Mongomery he is demanded to declare in the presence of God the simple truth of the accusations that were layd to his charge After prayer that God would be mercifull to him he confesseth as followes 1. He confesses the command given to him by the Reader at Sterlin to desist from his Office 2. He grantes that he had baptized children gotten in fornication but he took caution of the parents that they should satisfy the Church but this was not in presence of the Elders or Session 3. He remembereth not that ever he preached the circumcision of women 4. He made promise to the presbytery of Sterlin to wait on his charge of the Ministery there which he hath broken 5 He confesses that on March 20. the presbytery of Sterlin told him of the suspension b●t he was not certain of it because hee had not heard the process of it 6. He declares that howbeit he knew not the raising of many Letters against the brethren yet he keeped the ordina●y diets thereof 7. He grantes the usurpation of David Weems flock wherein he confesses he had heavily offended 8. He confesses he had heavily offended against God and his Church by procuring and raising Letters against the Gen. assembly and in accepting the Bishoprick of Glasgow without advice of the Assembly and in proceeding by this form of doing which he hath used for the which he submits himself unto the will of the brethren and is willing to abide their
command from the King and his Counsellors to entertain Mongomery and untill he were countermanded by his Majesty he will not remove him The Church having considered his answer ordaines the brethren of the Ministry who shall go in commission to Perth as they see occasion there and the grief not remedied concerning his entertaining the said Robert To proceed and appoint speciall men that shall proceed further against him with the censures of the Church according to the Acts of the Gen. assembly To whom the Church gives their full power to that effect As also the Assembly gives their commission to John Erskin of Dun the Ministers of the Kings house Ro. Pont Ja. Lowson Tho. Smeton An. Hay Da. Lindsay An. Polvart Peter Blackburn Pa. Galloway Wi. Crysteson Da. Ferguson Ia. Meluin Th. Buchanan Io. Brand Pa. Gilespy Io. Porterfield Ministers and And. Melvin To repair toward the King and Counsell to be conveened at Perth July 6. and there with all reverence due obedience and submission to present unto his Majesty and Nobility the speciall grievances of the Church conceived and given to them in write and in their names to lament and regrate the same Craving in the name and fear of the Eternall God them and every one of them to be repaired and redressed To the glory of God and welfare of his Majesty and confort of his Church And if need be with humility to conferre thereupon inform and reason And what herein shall be done to report unto the next assembly Promising to hold firm and stable what soever their brethren in the premisses shall judge righteously to be done In Sess 7. A Supplication unto the K. against his absolute power is the tenor of the grievances thus Unto your Majesty humbly mean and shew your Gr s faitfull obedient subiects the Ministers of Gods word within your Ma s realm conveened in the Generall assembly at Edinburgh Juny 17. that where as upon diverse great evident dangers appearing to the wholl Church of God and professors of his true religion in this countrey finding the authority of the Church abrogate her censures contemned and violence used against some of our brethren without punishment thereof the like hath never been seen in this realm nor in any place where the truth hath been taught and received And fearing lest your Majesty for want of information neglect in time to provide remedy for the inconvenients likely to ensue thereupon We have conveened ourselves in the fear of God and your Ma s obedience and after diligent consideration of this present estate of the Church and enormities falling forth in the same With common consent thought necessary by our Commissioners to present and open unto your Gr. certain our chief weighty griefs without hasty redress whereof the Church of God and true religion can no way stand continue in this your country 1. That your Majesty by advice of some counselers is caused to take upon your Gr. the spirituall power and authority which properly belongs unto Christ as the only King and Head of his Church the Ministery and execution thereof unto such as bear office in the ecclesiasticall Government So that in your Gr s person some men prease to erect a new Popedom as if your Majesty could not be full King and Head of this common wealth unless the Spirituall alswell as the temporall power should be put in your hand unless Christ be bere●t of his authority and the two jurisdictions confounded which God hath divided which tendeth directly to the wreck of all true religion as by the speciall heads following is manifest for 1. Benefices are given by absolute power to unworthy persons intruded into the Office of the Ministry without the Church's admission directly against the lawes of God and Acts of Parliament whereby church-livings come into profane mens hands and others that sell their souls and make shipwreck of conscience for pleasure of men and obtaining some worldly commodity 2. Elderships Synods and Generall assemblies are discharged by Letters of horning to proceed against manifest offenders and to use the disciplin of the Church censures according to Gods word 3. Jo. Dury by act of Counsell is suspended from preaching and banished from his flock 4. Excommunicat personsin contempt of God and his Church are entertained in chief Lords houses namely R. Mong is authorized and caused to preach and brought to your Ma s presence which is a sore wound to the consciences of them that love your Majesty and know your upbringing and an heavy scandall to all Nations professing the true religion 5. An Act or deliverance of the Counsell is made against the proceedings of the Ministry with a slanderous narrative suspending simpliciter and disannulling the excommunication justly and orderly pronounced against Robert Mongomery a rebellious and obstinate offender and troubler of the Church of God and open proclamations made according thereunto 6. Contempt of Ministers and beating John Howeson out of the judgement-seat where he was placed Moderator of the Presbytery the cruell and outragious handling of him carrying him to prison like a thief by the Provest and Bailives of Glasgow and their complices and after complaint made no order is taken therein but they are entertained as if that had been good service 7. Displacing the M. of Glasg out of his roome which without reproach he hath occupied these many years and convocation of the gentle men of the country that to effect 8. Violence used by one of your own guard to pull him out of the pulpit the day of the Communion in presence of the wholl congregation and in time of Sermon nor fault found therewith 9. The officer of the Church was cast into prison in your Gr s presence and there was keept a long time for execution of Letters against a particular scandalons man 10. Ministers Masters of Colledges and Scholares of Glasgow in time of publick fast were by letters of horning compelled to leave their flocks Schools destitute and afterwards from time to time and place to place have been delayd and continued thereby to consume them by exorbitant expences and to wreck the churches Schools where they should bear rule and charge 11. The scholars of Glasgow were invaded and their bloud cruelly shed by the Bailive and community gathered by sound of the common Bell and stroak of drum and by certain seditious men enflammed to have slain them all and to have burnt the Colledge and yet nothing done nor said to the authors of that sedition 12. Hands shaken with the bloody murderers and persecuters of the people of God by gifts received and given 13. The Duk 's Gr. often promised to reform his house and nothing is done there 4. The lawes made for maintaining true religion and punishing the enemies thereof are not put to execution So that all things go loose and worse like to ensue Many other things there be that crave present reformation where with wee think
where they were and at the Kings command he would cause deliver them It was also testified by Jo. Dury that he heard Pa. adamson grant that he had them After these testifications the Assembly concluded that Pa. Adamson shall be charged to deliver the books yet for the better advice David Lindsay was directed unto the Lord Secretary and returning with his answer thought meet a Supplication be given unto the LL. of Counsell to grant a charge against Pa. Adamson for restitution of the books and that the assembly also should use their power So a supplication is ordained to be penned and be presented the next day and a citation is sent to charge him to deliver the books within three days unto the Clerk and also to compear personally within that space to answer for his absence from the Assembly and to other accusations that shall be layd unto his charge Under the pain of the censure of the Church In Sess 4. it was thought expedient that before the ordinance made yesterday be put to execution against Pa. Adamson an humble supplication be made unto the King for that effect and two brethren are sent with it In Sess 6. the Kings Commissioners being present thought meet because the business with Pa. Adamson is civill wherein the King hath interest that he be acquainted with it This the assembly is willing to do In Sess 15. A Letter being directed by John Duncanson bearing the Kings command unto the Bishop to redeliver the books at the least four of them and that George young was stayd whill the books were delivered The assembly directeth Ja. Nicolson and Ale Raweson unto the L. Secretary to cause deliver them and after their direction and reitered direction of two other bretheren George young brought into the assembly five volumes of the Register whereof a great part was torn and after sight thereof the assembly ordaines a heavy regrate to be made unto his Majesty lamenting the mutilation of the books and to crave that they may remain with the Church as their own register The Lord Secretary answered that his Ma s will is that he may have the inspection of them when he shall have occasion and he shall presently give them back again III. In Sess 4. Because an offense conceived by the King against John Cowper and James Gibson hath been shewd privatly unto the Moderator It was thought expedient by the Assembly that the cause be first privatly considered by John Erskin of Dun and sixe other Ministers whom the Assembly nameth to confer thereupon with the parties if they can give satisfaction by their advice and otherwise that the cause be propounded publickly And these brethren are appointed to go presently about that business and the parties to wait upon them The result of their conference followes in the Kings articles IV. Seing the King is now of ripe age and a Parliament is appointed in the next month it is thought expedient that the Acts of Parliament made heretofore for liberty of the true Church and religion presently professed within the realm and for repressing Papistry and idolatry be collected and be craved to be confirmed as also the execution of these Acts may be considered and what other execution or law is needfull to be craved against Papists and idolaters As also the lawes and constitutions that have been made to the derogation of the said liberty or to the prejudice and stay of the course of the Evangell may be collected that the abrogation of them may be sought To this effect are appointed John Erskin Robett Pont Nic. Dalgliesh David Lindsay and Paul Fraser V. In Sess 5. the Commission given by the last Assembly to the presbyteries of Glasgow Sterlin concerning the slander of David Cuningham and other persons is suspended Sundry brethren complaine against Pa. Adamson at whose instance he is registred at the horn for not paiment of the stipends assigned unto them and for not furnishing wine unto the Communion this matter is regrated unto the Kings Commissioners The Prior or Lord Blantyre undertakes to communicate this purpose unto the other Commissioners of his Majesty and to report their advice unto the Assembly Also regrait is made that great division is in the Church of Santan that some will not hear P. Adamson preach nor communicat when he administrates the sacrament partly because he lyeth in rebellion or at the hor● and partly because of his suspension and some do repair unto him and they crave that this division may be redressed The Assembly judgeth it expedient first to hear what answer shall be reported in the former complaint VI. Unto that Question Whither it be a scandall that a Christian absent himselfe from the Sermons and other pious exercise used by them that ly at the Kings horn and are suspended from rhe Ministry It is resolved It is no scandall but it were rather scandalous to resort unto the foresaid exercise of one who lyeth at the horn and is suspended VII In Sess 9. No Master of Colledge or School shall receive any student or scholar being of maturity of age who refuseth to subscribe the Religion presently established and professed in the realm by the mercy of God or refuseth to participate of the sacrament Under the pain of the censure of the Church And before any Student be promoted to any degree in the Vniversity that they shall toties quoties as they shall be promoted subscribe de novo And that the Presbyteries shal be diligent to see the execution of this Act as they will answer to God c. VIII The Presbytery with their Commissioners in all parts of the country every one for their own part shall prescribe to every young man intending for the Ministry a part of Scripture together with some part of the Common places controverted heads of religion To be diligently read considered and studied by him within such a space of time as the Presbytery thinks good to appoint And that his profiting may appear the better at certain times of the year every Presbytery shall take account of his travells by requiring of him in that prescribed part of Scripture 1. the sum and deduction thereof 2. The solide sense or meaning of the places which are more difficile to be understood 3. a collation of sentences which by reading he may be able to gather out of other parts of Scripture and which may serve as arguments either to confirm the truth or refute hereticall opinions As to the Common places and heads let him answer to questions reasonings thereupon And he is to be exercised in this manner not for one time only but from time to time untill he come to certain maturity IX Whereas a scandall was spoken of by a presentation of the Bishoprik of Caitnes given unto Robert Pont he declares that he had given-in some complaints unto the Exchequer fot some hurt done unto him in time of his troubles and in compensation that presentation without his procurement