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A11927 The three partes of commentaries containing the whole and perfect discourse of the ciuill warres of Fraunce, vnder the raignes of Henry the Second, Frances the Second, and of Charles the Ninth : with an addition of the cruell murther of the Admirall Chastilion, and diuers other nobles, committed the 24 daye of August, anno 1572 / translated out of Latine into English by Thomas Timme minister.; Commentariorum de statu religionis et reipublicae in regno Galliae. English. 1574 Serres, Jean de, 1540?-1598.; Hotman, François, 1524-1590. De furoribus gallicis.; Tymme, Thomas, d. 1620.; Ramus, Petrus, 1515-1572. 1574 (1574) STC 22241.5; ESTC S4897 661,140 976

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But notwithstanding this time of mourning and sorow the afflictions moued against the Church which séemed by that wonderfull chaunce of the King to cease coulde not be asswaged by any meanes neither did the aduersaries cease to prosecute and follow the law against these two Counsellers Therfore when Burgaeus had oftentimes appealed frō them his appeales being pronounced by the Court to bée nothing and of no force he was at the length condemned by the Bishop of Paris from whome before he had appealed and was also disgraded The which he taking in very good part as might appeare by his cherefull countenance spáke these wordes To daye sayth he it is brought to passe by the singular goodnesse of God towardes me that to the ende I might neuer more haue to doe with Antichrist the badges and markes of that great beast are taken from me Diuers thought Burgaeus vsed many appeals to put of his aduersaries that thereby he might delay the time prolong his life notwithstāding he writing letters to the church of Paris affirmed that he did it not to preserue or prolōg his life the which he wold willingly bestow for the gospels sake but rather the he might séeme not to pretermit any thing which appertained to defende his right And therfore thinking that he had not done sufficiently by his plaine and manifest answeres he writeth also a confession in the which he professeth plentifully and plainly what he thought of euery speciall point of religion Notwithstanding afterwarde by the earnest perswasions and importunitie of his friends he was brought to that poynt that he propounded and deliuered to the Iudges a certaine ambiguous and doubtfull confession in so much that then there was great hope that he shoulde be set at libertie Of the which thing when the heads gouernours of the reformed Church had intelligence being very carefull for Burgaeus notwithstanding being sorie that he should after that maner be deliuered out of prison and from death commaunded one of the Ministers to put Burgaeus in mind of his dutie And certainely their friendly admonitions did so much preuayle with Burgaeus that he by and by earnestly acknowledging his sault desired at the handes of God pardon for the same and quite altereth that which before hée had done Therefore he offereth to his Iudges againe another suppliant booke by which he reueketh his doubtfull and last confession affirming that he standeth to his first confession and requireth that he maye haue iudgement of his cause thereby and that the last sentence eyther of condemnation or deliuerance may stande therevpon That confession is truly more large notwithstanding so well deseruing to be remembred that I thought good here to insert the same ▪ And first of all in that confession he affirmeth himselfe to be a Christian that is to saye such a one as embraceth the doctrine of God the father and his true sonne Iesus Christ of one substance and coeternal with the father and also of the holy ghost who is all one with the father and the sonne being the very power of the father and the sonne Secondly that God created man after his owne Image and similitude who notwithstanding by the suggestion of the Serpent that is to say of Sathan fell from God and made not only himselfe but also al his posteritie partakers of grieuous punishmentes sinne also cleauing to hys séede vnto the ende of the worlde Thirdly that there is but one waye to saluation namely Iesus Christ who being the very sonne of God became perfect man and tooke vpon him all our infirmities sinne only excepted This seconde Adam hath fulfilled the lawe for vs and made vs thereby partakers of euerlasting righteousnesse he liued here a time on earth died and was buried and after he had ouercome death he rose againe the thirde daye ascended into heauen and sitteth at the right hande of the Father making intercession for vs daily to him vntill he shall come to iudge the quicke and the deade Fourthly that he doth leane and stay himselfe onely vpon Gods worde that is to saye vpon the bookes of the olde and newe Testament penned pronounced and vttered by the holy ghost the Prophetes and Apostles being only instruments And that this is the only and euerlasting rule of truth to adde vnto the which or to take any thing therefro is great wickednesse Therefore all the lawes and Ceremonies which Popes and others haue made cannot binde the consciences of men And when he had layde this foundation he sayth that he doth detest the constitutions of the Pope by which he woulde séeme to be more wyse than the most prudent and mightie Lorde being also most contrarie to all truth the which thing he maketh more manifest by comparing the commaundementes of God with the traditions of the Pope God sayth he cōmaundeth vs to worke sixe dayes and to rest the seuenth daye but the Pope to adde thereto his deuise exempteth certaine dayes in the which he forbiddeth to works God permitteth vnto vs the vse of all meates with giuing of thankes but the Pope forbiddeth the same Our Sauiour Christ commaundeth that they which haue not the gift of continencie shoulde marie but the Pope most seuerely forbiddeth his Clergie to marie against the custome of the auncient Church God forbiddeth Images to be set in churches but the Pope cōmaundeth the contrarie And therfore he concludeth that he is very Antichrist and very liuely described of the Apostle Paule so to be ▪ After this be answereth to euery one of the Articles of the interrogatories one by one as to inuocation of Saints to the placing of Images in the temples to the Sacraments to Purgatorie and to the rest I therefore sayeth he acknowledging by what superstitions and errours I haue bene hytherto ledde and blinded doe nowe affirme that I doe vnfeynedlye abiure and abhorre them all euen from the bottome of my heart as things contrarie to the doctrine of my Lorde and Sauiour Iesus Christ which is the worde reuealed by the holy spirite of God and written by the Prophetes and Apostles The which worde I receyue and embrace as the rule of my whole lyfe euen as in olde time the fierie piller led the children of Israell through the Desert to the lande of promise I protest that I will direct and frame my whole life according to the prescript rule of that word by the assistance of Gods holy spirit which shall be with me order all my wayes without the which I can do nothing and by which all things are possible vnto me Insomuch that I am perswaded that all things shall happen to the glorye of the Lord to the enlarging of the kingdome of his sonne to the building of his Church and to my soules health which I commende vnto him to whome I giue most harty thanks whom I most humbly pray in the name of Iesus Christ his welbeloued sonne that he will strengthen and slablishe me by his holy
by the Churches of Fraunce WE belcue and confesse one God which is the only and simple spirituall essence eternall inuisible immutable infinite incomprehensible vnspeakable omnipotent onely wise good iust and mercifull 2 This onely God shewed himselfe to be such a one vnto men first both in the creation of his works and also in the conseruation gouerning of them secondly in his word that more euidently the which worde in the beginniing he reuealed vnto the fathers by certaine visions and oracles and afterward would haue it to be written in those bookes which we call the bookes of holy Scripture 3 All this holy Scripture is cōprehended in the Canonicall bookes of the olde and newe Testament the cataloge of the which bookes is this First the fiue bookes of Moses namely Genesis Exodus Leuiticus Numeri Deuteronomium then Iosue Iudges Ruth the two bookes of Samuel the two bookes of Kings the two bokes of Chronicles called Paraly pomenon the booke of Esdras Nehemias Esther Iob Psalmes Prouerbs of Salomon Ecclesiastes otherwise called the Preacher the booke of Cāticles otherwise called the Ballets of Salomon the Prophecie of Esaias Ieremias with the lamentations Ezechiel Daniel the twelue lesser Prophetes namely Oseas Ioel Amos Abdias Ionas Micheas Nahū Abacuc Sophonias Aggeus Zacharias Malachias the holy Gospell of Iesu Christ after Mathew after Marke after Luke and after Iohn The Actes of the Apostles Paules Epistle to the Romanes his two Epistles to the Corinthians his Epistle to the Galathians Ephesians Philippians Colossians his two Epistles to the Thessalonians both his Epistles to Timothie his Epistle to Titus to Philemon to the Hebrues Iames Epistle both the Epistles of Peter the thrée Epistles of Iohn the Epistle of Iude ▪ and the Apocalyps or Reuelation of Iohn 4 These bookes we confesse to be Canonicall that is to saye the Rule and stay of our faith the which we haue not onely by the common consent of the Church but also much more by the testimonie and inwarde perswasion of the holy ghost by the instinct and motion whereof we are taught to discerne them from other Ecclesiasticall bookes the which although they be profitable yet notwithstanding they are not such that we should ground any article of our faith vpon them 5 We beléeue that the worde comprehended in these bokes came from God alone from whome onely it hath his authoritie and not from men And séeing this is the summe of all truth contayning whatsoeuer is requisite for the worship of God and our saluation we saye that it is not méete neither for men nor yet for Angels to adde or detract any thing from the same word or to alter any thing in the same And herevpon it followeth that neither antiquitie nor customes nor multitude nor humane wisedome nor Judgements nor Edicts nor decrées nor Counsels nor Uisions nor Miracles ought to be compared or set against that worde of God but rather that all things oughte to be brought and examined according to the prescript rule therof Wherfore also those three Symbols or Creedes as the Apostles Crede the Nicene Crede and Athanasius Crede are allowed of vs bycause they are agreing to that worde of God. 6 This holie Scripture teacheth vs that in that singular and simple diuine essence there are three persons the Father the Sonne and the holye Ghost The Father is the first cause in order the originall of all things The Sonne is his wisedome and eternall word The holy Ghost is the vertue power and efficacie of them both The sonne was begotten of the Father before all worldes The holy Ghost procéeded from the Father and the Sonne frō euerlasting The which thrée persons are not confounded but distinct and yet for al that not separated but coessentiall coeternal and coequall togither To conclude in this mysterie we allow that which those foure ancient Councels did determine and do detest all those sectes and all others what soeuer cōdemned by those auncient holy Fathers namely by Athanasius Hilarius Cyrill Ambrose and others by the worde of God. 7 We beléeue that God the thrée persons working togither by his power wisdome incomprehensible goodnesse made all things that is to say not onely heauē and earth and all things in them contained but also inuisible spirites of which some fell to perpetuall destruction and other some abode still in their obedience The first as they are by their owne wickednesse depraued so are they perpetuall enimies of all goodnesse and therefore of the whole Churche But the other beyng preserued by the méere grace of God are Ministers of his glorye and appoynted for the saluation of the elect 8 We beléeue that God did not onely create all things but also ruleth and gouerneth them and disposeth also and ordereth at his pleasure whatsoeuer is in the worlde Notwithstanding we deme him to be the author of euill or of those things that are done amisse in anye wyse to deserue blame seing that his will is the chiefe and moste certayne marke and rule of righteousnesse and iustice For he hath rather admirable than speakeable reasons by which he so vseth all Diuels and sinfull men as Instrumentes that whatsoeuer they wickedly do the same as he did iustlye ordaine so also he tourneth it to good Therefore when wee confesse that nothing is done without his prouidence and ordynaunce wée do humblye adore the secrete mysteries that are hydden from vs neither doe we curiously inquire and séeke after those things which are aboue our capacitie But doe rather apply that to our vse and profite which the Scripture teacheth for oure quietnesse and tranquilitie Namely that God to whome all things are subiecte doth with fartherly carefulnesse watche for vs in so muche that not one heare of our heade shall fall away without his wil. And as for Sathan and all oure enimyes he hath them in such holde and bonds that except they haue power giuē vnto them from him they can do nothing at all vnto vs. 9 We beléeue that man being created pure and perfecte and according to the Image of God fell throughe his owne faulte from the grace which he had receyued and therefore caste him selfe from God the welspring of all rightcousnesse and goodnesse in so muche that his nature is altogether corrupted and his heart defiled whereby he hath loste all his former integritie without exception For althoughe he hath some discretion of good and euill notwithstanding we affirme that whatsoeuer light he hath in him the same is tourned into darkenesse when he seeketh after God in so muche that no maner of way he can come vnto him by his owne vnderstanding reason Moreouer although he hath a wil by which he is named to doe this or that notwithstanding seing that the same is captiued made subiect vnto sin it hath no libertie at all to will or desire that which is good but onely that which it receiueth by the grace
the true Religion with holines of life least in the middest of these troubles of warres the care of true godlinesse be quight extinguished The best weapons that may be had to fight against our enemies is holines of life and godly prayers If these be wanting our words shall runne through our owne sides And because saye they we sée before our eyes such horrible calamities we following the approued custome of the Church haue appoynted by a common decrée of all men that in all congregations their should be fasting and sollemne prayers for certaine dayes which we admonish you to vse modestly deuoutly and godly and also that God should be prayed vnto publiquely and priuatly to send a happie successe of all these troubles to the glory of his name and to the peace and tranquillitie of his Church They wrote letters also in the name of the whole Synode to Frederike County Pallentine at Rheine whom the refourmed Churches of France had found alwayes in time of cruell persecution a fréend and ready to helpe at néede This was the coppie of their letters We are not ignorant that the basenes of our condition is such that we should not trouble you with our letters but notwithstanding both the experience which we haue had of your singuler clemency and humanitie and also the waight and sharpenes of our miseries and calamities do constrayne vs in these our extremities to flée vnto you for ayd séeing that of long time you haue professed the trueth and haue had a singuler care to pro mote the glory of God and to mayntaine and defende those which professe the trueth of the Gospeel in what place soeuer they are First of all therfore we pray vnto God omnipotent and to the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which will haue Kings and Princes to bée Nourses of his Church that he will vouchsafe to confirme and strengthen your highnes in true fortitude constancy by his holy spirit which fortitude you haue hitherto aboundantly shewed with great commendation in setting forth and promooting the woord of God in your Churches And we giue you most harty thankes for those benefites which we receyued of you within these few yeares oftentimes intreating our kynges on the behalfe of our bretherne which were afflicted for the doctrine of Christ. And now we being gathered together of late out of all partes of the Realme for a common Counsell or Synode gladly call to mind the benefits which you haue shewed vppon vs and so much the more willingly also because at this time the truce being broken by which we began to enioye the benefite of the Kinges Edict we stand in great néede of your clemency We foresée the great tempest and calamities of our Churches like to ensue the state of your Churches of Germany in that Ciuill warre comming into our mind the which troubles and calamities being ended by God so happely who hath promised without all doubt to helpe his seruants there is no cause why we should feare Notwith standing we cannot chuse but be very carefull for our flockes commited to our charge But to make the matter more playne because we know that ye vnderstand already our care by certaine Noble men we will not be tedious vnto you Thus much we ad concerning our Churches namely That there is such a conspiracy made against our Churches that except God in his mercy do prouide for the same there is like to ensue no lesse calamitie and confusion than there hath happened long agoe to the Orientall Greeke and Affrican Churches For to conclude the matter in few wordes when the Duke of Guise and they which haue conspired with him perceyued that by the Edict of Ianuary men had leaue fréely and openly to preach the Gospell and that they were restrayned of crueltie which till that time they had declared by all maner of punishments many of the Kinges officers Noble men imbracing the doctrine of the Gospell they made a conspiracie with the enemies of the true Religion to kill in euery Citie the professors of the Gospel Of which their conspiracy we haue had manifest arguments First by the horrible slaughter committed at Uassi it may appeare and then by the cruell and bloudy murther of the men of Sens the Bishoppricke wherof pertayned to the Cardinall of Guise so great slaughter of them being made that for the space of fower dayes there was such killing and steying of men women children without any respect of person that the only remembraunce therof cannot but cause teares to bée shed Yea the dead bodies of such as were slayne came swimming down the Riuer of Seine to Paris requiring as it were their buriall and complayning of this tiranie or rather calling for vengeanee of God and man And now although we know it rather to be our dutie to pray for our enemies and for those which do persecute vs than to accuse them yet notwithstanding we trust that you will interprete to the best these complaints of our iust grief of our manifold calamities And for so much as those our aduersaries to leaue no thing vndone that might be to our destruction haue required your Realme of Germany to ayd and assist them we earnestly pray and beséech you for the loue which you beare to the Church of Christ that you will bend all your might to withstand and put away this euill least Germany imbracing the same truth of the Gospell which we do be euill spoken of for séeking to hurt and anoye vs And we intreat your honour by the tender mercy of God that you will vouchsafe to be a meane for vs to the King and Quéene that there may be some consideration had of our Churches and that you would helpe to mayntayne and defend so iust a cause the time requiring the same Concerning the Letters which the Prince of Conde sent to the refourmed Churches of Fraunce we haue spoken before in the which he willed them when they sawe warres to begin to prepare themselues to the warre with a good courage Whereuppon in many places they obeyed his commaundements some prospering very well in their affayres othersome not hauing so good successe They fortefyed with men and munitiō so much as they could the Cities And after the inhabitants of Towers of Blais and of Angewe had so done also the men of Poicters did the like and then the Normans which fortefied diners Cities tooke their chiefe Citie called Roane But at Burdeux and almost through but Gascoyne except in certaine meane townes the faith full were molested by Monsiere Monluce the Lieutenant who delt very cruelly with the faithfull euery where but specially at Bourdeux By the meanes of this Monsire Monluce there was a great slaughter committed vppon the faithfull at Tholoz and the rest of the multitude which were many in number and had escaped this gréeuous murther brake out of the Citie being a necessary place of refuge both for them and also for
the same in declaring that he commaunded those murders too bee committed hauing also made protestation before that it is too his greate griefe and done by the outrage and violence of those of Guise against whome he was not able to make speedie resistance in tyme as his Maiestie desired And in this quarell wee the Gentlemen Capitaines and other that make you this answere are readie to trie it by combat man to man or otherwise to maintaine the honour of our King against all those that so p●…ophane holye things and as much as in them lyeth doe by such wordes and titles vilainously defile the excellence of his Maiestie and of the noble Princes of his bloude VVhich wee maye right well coniecture and estimate by the slaughters that are yet in doing as well in the towne of Paris as else where vpon so manye noblemen gentlemen and other men women and children and vpon a greate number of yong scholars the maintenance vnder God of Realmes and common weales in time to come and by many other barbarous vnnaturall and vnmanly actes generally committed VVe think therfore and iudge that herein treason is enterprised against the person of his Mai●…stie and of my Lords his brethren and that the Guisians meane to inuade the Crowne of the Realme as they haue of long tyme practised and how so euer it be we say that his Maiestie is forced by the power that they haue taken vpon them and vsurped by meane of the rebellious stirre of the commons of Paris As for that which they saye that the Admirall and those of the Religion had conspired against the Kings Maiestie and his brethren these be allegations of as greate truth and of as good likelyhoode as their maner of proceeding in Iustice hath bene orderly beginning at execution before examination of the fact But it is now no neede to tarrie for tyme too discouer it for the matter is plain to bee seen with eye and groped with hand and all those of the Romishe Religion that haue remaining any droppe of nature of man doe confesse it and holde downe their heads for shame cursing both with hart and mouth the cruel executers of this abhominable enterprise and the wicked disturbers of common quiet which can yet no more suffer than they hetherto haue done that this poore Realme shoulde long enioye the benefite of that peace which the King alone next vnder God had wisely caused to be made and to bee accordingly obserued whereof this Realme began to feele the good taste to the greate contentement of all persons except the enimies of peace and of this Realme namely the Guisians Finally when his Maiestie being out of their handes and power shall declare what is his pleasure wee will endeuour vs to obey him in all things wherin our consciences which are dedicate to God alone shall not be wounded in which case wee will rather forsake the earth than heauen and our frayle and transitorie houses rather than the heauenly mansions But hetherto the lawe of nature and the duetie that we owe to our naturall Prince to the preseruation of his Crowne and to the safetie of our lyues oure wiues and children doth commaund vs to stand vpon our garde and not to put vs in the mercie of those that haue receyued the same bloudy commission from the Guisians vnder the pretended name of the King to vse vs in the same manner as they haue wickedly tr●…itorously and vnnaturally done to those about his Maiestie and as it were vnder his wings and vnder the skirtes of his robe which the traitors strangers haue stained with the true French bloud without that his Maiestie hath bene able to remedie it nor too staye their cursed at●…emptes so much lesse is he able now so farre off to defend vs as he would which his Maiesties good wil being knowne vnto vs doth arme vs for our defence and for the safegarde of our liues and of the priuileges which he hath giuen vs vntil such tyme as he shall be able by himself to defend vs against his enimies and ours FINIS Iohn Sleidan Iacobs slaughter at Paris Newe deuises to abolishe the Gospell The tumult of Ambaxian The king●… Edict of pardō Sodeine alteration by the death of king Fraunces The Kings Edict cōmonly called the Edict of Ianuarye The name of Lutheranes Geneua a sanctuarie for the godly Great persecution in the Church of Paris Anno domini ▪ 1557. Wicked slaunders deuised against the faithfull Duke Arscotus a Brabantine An apologie for the faithful captiues The arrogant threatnings of the Constable Anno domini 1558. Certayne examples of Gods vengeance shewed vppon diuers persecutors of the Church Persecution stayed for a time Examples of iniuries done to the faithful 16. leafe The fruites of the sermons of the Papistes The parliament at Paris Foixius The first synode of the Churches of Fraunce The summe of the letters of the Princes of Germanie sent to the King. Annas Burgaeus examined condemned and iudged to dye The death of king Henrie The summe of the confession of Burgens A comparison betvvene the doctrine of the Gospell and the Romishe doctrine 2. Thes. 2. 3. The sentēce of death against Burgaus By the tyrant Phalaris he meaneth the Cardinall of Loraine Great afflictiō of the Church after the death of king Hērie An example of two false brethren Grieuous affliction Margaret Riche The descriptiō of the tumult of Ambaxia Villemongius he Kings ●…rs of par●…n Spirituall ●… guenotes a Temporall Huguenote The names of Princes did not appertaine to the Guises in the kingdome of Frāce Afflictions after a sort cease A description of the Scotres warre for Religion Calabria a countrie ioyning to Naples The Scripture The worde The three Credes The Trinitie Man. Originall sin ▪ Election Christ. God and man. Two natures in Christ. The death of Christ. The Sacrifice of Christ. Remission of Sinnes Faith. The grace of the holy gost Newnesse of lyfe Good works The figures of the law The doctrine of the law One onely aduocate Intercession of saintes Purgatory Ecclesiasticall discipline The vnitie of the Church What the Church is The Papacy Discipline of the Church The lawful election of mi nisters Excommunication Sacraments Baptisme The Lords Supper Magistrates The supplications of the faithfull deliuered by the Admiral to the King. The sentence of the Bishop of Valentia Bishops of Rome Lawyers Bishop●… Curates He speaketh to Queenes namely to the Kings mother and the Kings wife The singing of Psalmes The seconde remedie to appease troubles The example of the kings Carolus Magnus and Lodowicke The Gospell of diuers men diuersly receyued With what weapons in time past the Bishops resisted heretikes The oration of the Bishop of Vienna Two pillers of the kingdome The office of a King A Tyrant Religion Why a generall Councell is not to be looked for A Parliament The controuersie betwene Charles the v. and Pope Clement Forewarnings of delolation to come Couetousnes the Babilonicall beast Math.
it began in maner as followeth Weye and consider with your selfe your estate and you shall finde that all things haue happened ouertwha●…tly vnto you euer since you haue gone about to vexe the Lutheranes When you set forth the Edict made at Cast ellobrian then began warres But when you inhibited and forbad the executiō of that Edict and were an enimie to the Pope in sending a power into Germanie for the libertie thereof bicause of the afflicted religion your busines had very prosperous successe But what hath hapned vnto you euer since you entred into friendship with the Pope taking the sword of him by which truce being broken warres might begin a fresh God vndoubtedly shall turne thy felicities into those calamities which are now ready to fall vpon thée and thy dignitie To what end went the armie of the Duke of Guise into Italy when he had serued Gods enimie for hire went he not to this ende that when he returned home againe he might vtterly destroy the Churches of the valleys of Pedemonte and might so offer and dedicate his victories vnto God Surely the ende and successe sheweth that God doth bring the deuises and counsels of men to naught when they turne to their own destruction as appeareth by the slaughter which happened on S. Laurence daye of late at what time he derided and frustrated the proude threatninges of the Constable which boasted that if he returned home againe a victor or conquerour he woulde roote out and vtterly destroy Geneua Thus after the repeating of many examples in the which the iudgements of God did appeare against the aduersaries of his truth whose memory also was yet fresh in the heads of al men this letter at the length cōcludeth that afflictiōs cannot abolish destroy the Church of God séeing that as Tertullian sayth The bloud of Martyrs is the seede of the Church and that it is the office of a King to take vpon him the care of religion the which all men might sée by diuers ways to be contaminated and neglected that this might lawfully be done by calling a Councell In the meane time that their cause as yet being vnknowne not certaine they may be peaceably not cruelly intreated which protest that they follow Gods truth and that so holy a name cannot in such wise be cōtemned but some inquisition must be made also that iudgement ought to be had not from the deuises of men but from the worde of God the only and most certaine rule of truth Therfore say they if we be not conuinced by Gods word it is neither fire nor sworde nor any maner of punishment that can terrifie vs These shall be the triumph and victorie of our faith that by being ouercome we shall be ouercommers at the last by this Chariote we shall come at the length to the hauen of euerlasting lyfe But that Edict which was made at Cast ellobrian of the which we haue made mention before was very straite and cruell against Religion in the which among many things these were the speciall sentences First that all former Edictes concerning the putting of heretiques to death should be confirmed That no man shoulde be admitted to anye publike office before he had made his cōfession agréeable to the Catholike and Romishe faith That in euery Parliament and in the thirde moneth also there shoulde be assemblies made which are commonly called Mercuriales and that first of all matters concerning Religion shoulde be handled and that there shoulde be speciall regarde and eye had to the assembly of the Parliament least some corruption or heresie might secretly créepe in There was also another Apologie set forth for all men to vse so written that the auncient forme and state of the Church being represented and compared to that which is at this day the auncient fathers themselues also by their own wordes and writings might defend and maintaine the verye selfe and same cause which they nowe defended and in such wise that they which sayde that they reuerenced and embraced antiquitie might heare antiquitie defending and supporting the cause of the reformed Church so called These things truly are plentifully set forth in this wryting but the summe is this That it was against right that the faithfull shoulde be accused for well doing but more iniurious that they should be condemned their cause not being heard Notwithstanding that the Church of Christ before this time long since had felt the same iniuries therfore no maruaile if they whose cause was like were made equall to them in trouble Howbeit that Sathan and his Ministers shoulde so little preuaile that for all their force the Church shoulde arriue through the midst of their temptations to the safe and quiet hauen and the thicke and dark Clowdes being blowne ouer the light of innocencie should appeare and the enimies of the same be founde lyers After this those slaunders and reproches which were obiected against them being particularly examined and considered by them were also fully aunswered altogither out of the writings of the Fathers that their Apologie or defence myght plainly appeare to be true and sounde Furthermore many letters were written to the brethren which were in prison yea and Churches of farre Countries bewayling their estate did comfort them with their letters so that hereby they were wondefrully confirmed And among other Churches or congregations the congregation of Geneua shewed the dutie of the faithfull brethren insomuch that they did not let by all meanes possible to doe them good While those things were prouided for of the faithful the aduersaries on the contrarie part sought by all meanes possible to worke the death of the faithfull which were in prison so soone as they coulde and in this matter Munerius the ciuill Magistrate was not a little diligent and the people for their part gréedily gaped and continually looked for the same Now there came forth a commaundement from the King that all other matters set apart for a time the senate shoulde wholy applye themselues to vnderstande the cause of the faithfull and to iudge of them according to the euidence that shoulde be brought against them by Munerius the eiuill Praetor Notwithstanding the Kings commaundement herein the whole Senate or assembly of the Court refusing and reiecting this Munerius both for that he withstoode the auncient custome of the Court and also bicause as is before sayde he was accused of falshoode concluded that by the relation and report of anye one man which shoulde come forth and giue euidence the iudgement and sentence of those Iudges that were put in trust shoulde be ordered The whole Senate therefore although they were not a little troubled with the great number of prisoners yet notwithstanding what by the expresse commaundements of the King to them and what with the olde and 〈◊〉 spyte they vare to Religion so greatly preuayled within fewe dayes that their causes in déede came to iudgement Of the which they which constantly helde the
spirite in this fayth vnto the ende and that it will please him to graunt me-strength for his mercies sake with my heart and mouth boldly to confesse his holy name both before the faithfull and also before Infidels tyrants and murthering butchers of Antichrist euen to the shedding of the vtmost drop of my bloud All my desire is to liue and dye in this sayth being fully perswaded that the same is grounded vpon the worde of God alone and that all the Saintes Patriarkes Prophetes and Apostles did lyue and dye therein This is the only true knowledge of God in the which the vndoubted and eternall felicitie of men is placed This I saye is the fayth in the which I will both liue and die To this confession I haue subscribed with my owne hande being readye also to seale the same with my bloude for the defence of the doctrine of the sonne of God whom I pray to open the eyes of your heartes that at the length if it be his will ye maye knowe and vnderstande the truth Therefore when he had wholye confirmed that confession and had with his owne mouth plainely testified the same before his Iudges then was there no hope left that Burgaeus shoulde be deliuered For he had great and mightie aduersaries among whome his chiefe and principall enimie was the Cardinall of Loraine who left nothing vndone that might by any maner of meanes hasten his death For he feared least at the length he shoulde bée deliuered by the king For many Noble men as Fredericke Earle of Palatine Prince Elector and others had very earnestly written to the King for him All things therefore being so appoynted as wée haue shewed hys aduersaries thought that they had manye iust reasons by which they might condemne him to dye And therefore on the twentie day of December they pronounce the sentence of death agaynst him namely That Burgaeus being condemned of heresie shoulde be burnt with firé vntill his bodie were consumed to ashes The which sentence Burgaeus heard and receiued cherefully and when he had heard it he gaue thanks vnto God that had suffred him to sée so ioyfull and happie a daye and prayed also vnto God that hée woulde pardon and forgiue his Iudges who had iudged him according to their owne conscience and knowledge but not according to the true knowledge and wisedome of god Many wordes be vttered vnto them at that time which were so rhetoricall weightie and sentencious with vehemencie vttred that it might well appeare the holy ghost rather to speak than he the which his words here to repeare shall be nothing from our purpose Hath sayth he that fraudulent message of hell full of all guile and deceyte and an abhominable lie with deadly hatred still striuing against the truth so preuayled that being accused vnto you falslye for those men which we are not shall so be condemned We I saye are the sonnes of God whome we knowe to be our father with whom there is no respect of persons with whome we are able to doe all thinges and without whome nothing he it is whome you ought to heare speaking nowe vnto you otherwise he threateneth vnto you death and destruction It is trulye the part of great and intollerable boldenesse for men to dare presume so much against the holy and in●…tolable commaundement of God. Shall we suffer our redemption and the bloude so plentifullye shed for our sinnes to be troden vnder foote Shall we not obey that our most mightie King who woulde haue vs to defende his cause who séeketh vs who sustaineth vs who is also our ▪ Captaine in fight What shall we do then shall feare make vs vnconstant or driue vs from doing our dutie No we shall rather be strong and valiant séeing we encounter with so weake an enimie But beholde what this wicked generation commaundeth that we suffer God to be blasphemed that we betray the truth of God and such like the which bicause we will not do we are counted execrable and wicked yes we are called seditious Ye are say they rebels to Princes and wherefore bicause we will not offer vnto Baal O good God how long wilt thou suffer the vnbridled lustes and ambitions willes of men to haue their swaye In the meane time most merciful and louing father till it shall please thée to restraine them haue mercy vpon vs leade vs forth and gouerne vs in defending of thy truth to the vtmost of our power Make it to be knowne O Lord that they themselues are rebels in déede to Princes and I for my part while I haue breath will not let to tel them so Is this to play the part of a rebell for a man to giue vnto his Prince both body and goodes and whatsoeuer else to be at his pleasure Is this the part of a traitor and Rebell to praye vnto God for the preseruation and prosperitie of the King and the kingdome and that he and his Ministers Counsellers and Magistrates maye truly and faithfully doe their dutie that all false worship being taken away God may be glorified alone and of all men purely worshipped Is not this rather rebellion to deface Gods glorie and to giue that honor due vnto him to creatures and to followe the deuises and fantasies of men in worshipping him to count it a vertue to rent and teare the name of God with blasphemous othes to suffer brothell houses and common stewes and an infinite number of wickednesses mo I appeale here vnto you ye Senators if ye beare the sworde of the Lorde only to reuenge his cause to the punishment of wickednesse and vice take héede I aduise you what ye doe Will ye giue iudgement and pro●… condemnation against your selues Weigh and consider I pray you a little with your selues the wickednes that is layde to our charge and first of all iudge whether it be more méete for vs to obey you rather than god Are ye made so drunke with the Cup of the great beast Doe ye after this sorte bring the people from falling into sinne whome ye bring from the true worship of God If you reuerence and feare more the opinions of men than ye do the iudgement of God consider with your selues what the people of forroine nations and kingdomes shall thinke of you when the crueltie of your iudgements shall be spoken of in euery place ▪ yea and that before so famous Princes Howe many wickednesses doe ye commit by the commaundements of that ruddie purpuled Phalaris canst thou O cruel tyrant by the cruel death cease our sobbing sighes who at his owne pleasure for his proper aduauntage and gayne aduanced the authoritie of certaine rulers to the destruction of the King and the whole kingdome At his commaundement ye so racke and torment our bodies that ye your selues are constreyned to pitie the same Howe great is your crueltie But me thinketh I sée teares fall from your eyes Why wéepe you Can you hide the burthen of your consciences
whom it pleaseth God to giue the same that the faithfull might haue nothing in them selues to boast of whē as rather they are two folde more bound to God than others in that they are preferred before others Also we beleue that faith is giuen to the electe not that they should once onely walke in the right way but rather to cōtinue in the same al the dayes of their lyfe bicause as the beginning is of God so is also the ende 22 We beleue that we which are by nature the seruants of sinne by the same faith are regenerate into a new life For by faith we receiue grace to lyue a holy and godly lyfe whē we imbrace that ●…uangelicall promise that the Lorde will giue vnto vs the holy Ghost Therfore faith is so far from taking away the desire to leade a godly life that it doth rather inflame the same in vs from whence good workes necessarily do follow But although God doth regenerate vs to the ende he might fully saue vs notwithstanding we affirme that the good workes which we do by the assistance of Gods holy spirite are not so regarded of God that we shuld be iustified by them or deserue to be counted the sonnes of God bicause we shoulde alwayes doubte and feare if so be that we had not that satisfactiō by which Christ Jesus hath deliuered vs from all harme 23 We beleue that all the figures of the law are taken away by the comming of Christ although we know that the truth and substaunce of them remaine in him in whō they were fulfilled Howbeit we must vse and exercise the Law and the Prophets both for the framing of our life and also that we may be the more confirmed in the promises of the Gospell 24 We beleue that seing Jesus Christ is giuen to vs to be our onely aduocate who also commaundeth that we should boldly come to the Father in his name and seing it is not lawfull for vs to pray in any other order and forme than in that which God him selfe hath appointed in his word what soeuer men haue deuised concerning the intercessiō of dead Saintes it is nothing else but the deceite and crafte of Sathan to drawe men from the right and true forme of prayer We doe also reiect all those meanes whatsoeuer that men haue inuented to delyuer them selues from the wrath of God for so muche as they doe derogate so much from the death and sacrifyce of Jesus Christ as men gyue and attribute vnto them To cōclude we thinke that Purgatory is a fable brought forth of y same shop frō whēce also came Monastical vows pilgrimages prohibitiō of Matrimonie the vse of meates the ceremoniall obseruation of certaine dayes Auricular confession Iuduigences and suche like abhominations by which some thinke that they merit grace and saluation All which things we do reiecte not onely for the false opinion conceyued of meriting adioyned vnto them but also bicause they be the inuentions of men and a yoake layde vpon consciences by the authoritie of men 25 We beléeue bicause we can not obtaine Christ but by the Gospell that the holy and inuiolable discipline established by his authoritie in the Churche ought to be obserued and that therefore Pastours ought to be in the Church to whom appertaineth the office of preaching the worde and the ministration of the Sacramentes whom men ought to honor and reuerently heare if they beyng lawfully called discharge their dutie not that God of necessitie néedeth such inferior helpes but rather bycause it thus seemeth good vnto him to rule vs as it were with a bridle And therfore we do detest all those fanaticall persons which so muche as in them lyeth séeke to abolishe the holy ministerye that is to say the preaching of the worde and the administration of Sacraments 26 We beléeue therefore that it is lawfull for no man to withdrawe himselfe from the Congregation and to trust in himselfe but is rather the duetie of all men to defende and kéepe the Unitie of the Churche submitting them selues to the common Institution and yoake of Christe wheresoeuer God hath appointed the true and Ecclesiasticall discipline althoughe the Edictes of Magistrates be against the same from the which order whosoeuer separate them selues they resist the ordinance of God. 27 We beléeue that with great diligence and discretion the true Church must be discerned by the name whereof many are too much abused Therfore we affirme out of the worde of God that the Churche is a company or congregation of the faithfull which do agrée in following the word of God and in imbracing true Religion in the which also they dayly profite and go forward grounding and confirming one another in the feare of God who although they receiue neuer so great profite yet must they daylie of necessitie seeke for remission of sinnes And yet for all this will not denie but that manye hipocrites and reprobates are mixed with the faithfull but yet their wickednesse can not take awaye the name the Church 28 Therfore in beléeuing of this thing we also openly affirme that where the worde of God is not receiued nor no profession of that obedience shewed that belongeth thervnto nor no vse of the Sacraments there to speake properly we can Iudge no Church to be We therfore condemne the Papisticall Church bicause the pure truth of God is banished out of the same in the which the Sacramentes of faith are corrupted falsified or else quite abolished in the which all superstition Idolatry is to be founde And therfore we thinke that all they which do ioyne themselues to such actions and do communicate with them doe separate them selues from the body of christ Nothwithstanding bicause in the Papacy remaineth some Imitacion of the true church and specially the substance of Baptisme the efficacie wherof dependeth not vpon him that ministreth the same we graunt that they which are baptized in the same Popishe Church haue no néede to be baptized againe howbeit bycause of the corruptions with the which Baptime is there mixed no man can offer his childe to be of them baptized but he must pollute him selfe 29 We do beléeue that the true Churche oughte to be gouerned with that discipline which our Lorde Iesus Christ appointed and to haue in the same Pastors Ministers and Deacons that the pure doctrine of the Gospell may be preached vice bridled and poore afflicted persons so far as nede shall require comforted 30 We do beléeue that all true Pastors wheresoeuer they be placed haue power and authoritie all a like vnder that onely head and chiefe vniuersall Bishop Iesus Christ And therfore that it is lawfull for no Church to chalenge vnto it selfe imperie or rule ouer another 31 We do beleue that it is vnlawfull for anye man of his owne authoritie to presume to take vpon him the gouernment of the Church but ought rather to
be chosē to the same by lawfull election if so be the same may be had We adde this if bicause sometime as in oure time also when the Church hath bene troubled and persecuted many haue béen constrayned without ordinarie callyng by the motion of Gods holye spirite to take vpon them to repaire the ruinousnesse of the decayed Church notwithstanding howsoeuer the matter be we doe beléeue that this rule ought to be followed that all pastors and ministers maye haue sufficient testimonie of their calling 32 We doe beléeue it to be necessarie that they which are chosen to be the chiefe ouerséers of some one Churche doe diligently waye and consider among them selues by what waye or meanes the whole body of the same Churche may be best gouerned Notwithstanding so that they swerue in no poynt from that which our Lorde Iesus Christ hath appointed And this letteth not but that certaine places maye haue their peculiar and speciall institutions to them appertaining as it shall séeme best 33 And we doe exclude all humane inuentions and lawes whiche vnder the pretence of the worshippe of God doe bynde the consciences of men and we doe onely admit and alow those which tend to the maintaining of concord the keping of euerye one in due obedience in the which thing we thinke it méete to follow that which our Lord sauiour Christ appointed concerning excommunication the which with the circumstances also we allow thinke necessarye 34 We doe beléeue that there are Sacramentes ioyned to the woorde for further confirmations sake as pledges and seales of the grace of God by which our infyrme and weake faith may be stayed and holpen For we confesse these externall signes to be such that God by them worketh with the power of his holy spirit that nothing there might be set before vs in vaine Notwithstāding we doe thinke that al the substance veritie of them resteth in Christ Iesu frō whō if they be separated they are nothing but vayne shadowes 35 We doe confesse that there belong onely two Sacramentes to the whole Church of the which the first is Baptisme giuen vnto vs to testifie our adoption bycause thereby we are grafted into the body of Christ as beyng washed with his bloud and are also renewed to holynesse of life by his spirite This also we affirme that although we are but once baptized yet notwithstanding the fruite of Baptisme doth appertaine to the race of our whole life to the ende that this promise mighte be sealed in vs by a sure and certaine seale namely that Christ will be alway our sanctification righteousnesse and redemption Furthermore althoughe Baptisme be a Sacramente of fayth and repentaunce yet notwithstanding seyng God doth recken and accounte the children wyth the parentes to be of his Church we affirme that infantes borne of holy and godly parents ought by the authoritie of Christ to be baptized 36 We affirme that the holy Supper of the Lord which is the other Sacrament is a testimony vnto vs of our vnion with our Lorde Iesus Christ bicause he did not thinke it sufficient for vs onely to dye and to be raysed agayne the third day for our sinnes but also féedeth vs still ▪ and nourisheth vs with his fleshe and bloude that being made one with him we maye be partakers of life with him For although he be now in heauen and shall abide there vntill he come to iudge the worlde yet notwithstanding we beleue that he doth by the secrete and incomprehensible power of his spirite nouryshe and quicken vs wyth the substance of hys fleshe and bloude apprehended by faithe And we saye that this is done spiritually not that we go about to put fantasie and imagination in steade of efficacie and veritie but bicause this misterie of our vnion and knot made betwene Christ and vs is sodaine and far paste our reache that by no meanes we are able to comprehende it To be shorte séeing it is a thing so diuine and heauenly it can not be by any meanes apprehended but by faith onely 37 We beléeue as it is saide before that the Lord as well in the Supper as in Baptisme doth giue vnto vs in verye déede that is to saye truely and effectually whatsoeuer is therin figured Sacramentally and therfore we ioyne with signes the true possession and fruition of that thing which is so offered vnto vs Therfore we affirme that they which bring a pure fayth as a vessell with them to the holy table of the Lorde doe verily receiue that which the signes doe there testifie for the body and bloude of Iesus Christ is no lesse meate and drinke to the soule than bread and wine is the sustenance of the body 38 In like maner we saye that the element of water although it be corruptible doth truely testifie vnto vs the inward washing of our soule in the bloude of Iesus Christ by the efficacie of the holy Ghost And therefore we reiecte all those fanaticall persons which reiect these outward signes when as our Sauiour Christ him selfe spake these wordes saying This is my Body and This Cup is my Bloud 39 We beléeue that it is Gods will that the world shoulde be ruled and gouerned by lawes and politique gouernement that there may be some meanes by which the immoderate desires of the worlde may be bridled and restrained and that therefore he hath appointed kingdomes common weales and other kindes of dignities whither they come by inheritance or otherwise and not onely that but whatsoeuer pertaineth to right and equitie the author whereof he himselfe woulde be counted Therefore also he hath put the swerde into the hands of Magistrates to punishe offences not onely against the seconde table but also against the first Wherefore we must for his sake which is the author of this order not onely suffer that they may rule whome he hath set ouer vs but also honour and reuerence them as his Ministers appointed by him to take that lawfull and holy office vpon them Therefore we affirme that lawes and statutes ought to be obeyed tribute and taxes payed and all other burthens discharged and voluntary subiection yelded to magistrates yea although they be infidels so that God be not dishonored Therefore we detest all those that denie rule and gouernment and refuse to obey desiring a confusion and to haue all things common and going about to ouerthrow all lawe and good order This therefore was the plaine and simple confession of the faythfull Christians of the reformed Churches of Fraunce and a plaine explication of that Doctrine for the which they were so greatly persecuted by the Popishe Bishops Thus endeth this first Book ¶ The seconde Booke of Commentaries of the state of Religion in the kingdome of Fraunce IT was prouided and appointed as we haue shewed before by the kings Edict that there should be a Parliament by which the great perturbations which at that time all men sawe
Emperour woulde haue the actes of the Councell handled before him to be openlye publyshed abroade But concerning the paines and punishments which were hitherto appointed this he sayde was his opinion ▪ and iudgement That doctrine for the which all this trouble ariseth is of diuers men diuersly receyued Some so soone as they hearde of the same perfecte and approued doctrine and had in no poynt imbraced receyued the same thought it sufficient to knowe this one thing namely that no man ought to heare Masse and that it was lawfull to eate fleshe in Lent that men were not bounde to Auricular confession and that it was lawfull to speake euill of Priestes These men vndiscretely went about to defend that doctrine by force of armes but to be short these men vnder the pretence of Religion were mere seditious and are by no meanes to be excused For if these kinde of men were Christians or by any maner of meanes true receyuers of the Gospell they ought to remember that the Apostle commaunded to praye for Kings and to render all obedience vnto them yea though they were cruell and wicked also they ought to call to minde that neuer in the Church specially in the time of the twelue great persecutions in the which an infinite number of Christians were put to death there was any one man founde which went about to defend his cause by force of armes but rather ouercame the crueltie of their Emperours with their pacience Another sort of men there are also which imbrace this doctrine and retain the same with such zeale loue and obedience towardes God and the King that they woulde in nothing offende them By the life and death of these men it is manifest that they haue a desire to attayne saluation and to finde the way that leadeth to the same and when they haue founde that way they neither feare losse of lyfe and goods nor any maner of punishment but to the vtmost of their power prosecute that way Wherfore they are not to be counted among the number of those wicked professors before spoken off nor to be numbred in the companie of seditious persons As yet we see it playne inough that those punishmentes which haue bene deuised haue done no good but on the contrarie part their patience which they manifestly shewed in the middest of the fierie flames hath stirred vp many to haue a liking and to fauour their cause Herevpon it came to passe that they which neuer hearde of the same doctrine for the which they suffer were desirous to vnderstande what doctrine it was and at the length hauing intelligence of the same they did receiue it with no lesse affection zeale than others had done being ready by the ensample of others to suffer death for it Therfore set before your eyes and consider the examples of the thrée hundred and eightene Bishoppes in the first Councell of Nice of the. 150. in the Councell of Constantinople of the 200. in the Councell of Ephesus and of the 630. in the Councell of Chalcedon who neuer vsed any other armour than the worde of God against the Arrians Macedonians Nestorians and other heretikes conuicted of blasphemie against the holy Trinitie Constantinus Valentinian Theodosius Martian being Christian and godly Emperours did vse no greater punishment against the authors of sects than banishment And as touching assemblies and multitudes gathered togither they were always forbidden for the daūger that séemed therof to arise the king also hath sufficiently prouided for this thing by his Edicts And thus this Bishop made an end of his oratiō adding this one thing by the Kings leaue that it was mete in punishing to haue a prudent consideration of the place of the time of the wils of men of the cōpani●… called togither After this man Carolus Marillacus Bishop of Vienna in Dolpheny vttered his opinion in maner and forme folowing Although that matter which is propounded vnto vs to deliberate vpon is very hard long bicause it is left at large and is general therfore the more vneasie to be concluded séeing we must come frō that which is generall to particularities in discussing wherof the diuersitie of Iudges will bring as it is likely great varietie of opiniōs yet notwithstanding we must hold this as a sure certaine rule in the discussing of all matters namely that after long consultation debating of things some certaintie at the length must be concluded that there cannot be a more pestilent mischiefe mortal plague in the gouernment of common weales than to wander among the diuersitie of opinions to appoint and retaine no certaine thing And if this rule so greatly commended of wise men so prudently obserued of Kings of common weales of Princes which euer at any time florished ought to stirre vs vp to follow the same way and rule truly the necessitie the extremitie in the which we are hath brought vs into such a strayt that we cannot do otherwise though we would ▪ And as all men of sound iudgement wil confesse y matter cannot abide in that state in the which it is now any lōger But lest I be tedious vnto you ▪ I will come to the matter The tumults which of late haue hapned the feare of newe things the complaintes and displeasure of many men and the feare also and dreade that is among men ought to stirre vs vp to séeke and prouide for remedies in time which may defende vs from these great troubles which else wil make a great alteration of y state And that I may briefly conclude this matter I thinke that there are two things as it were two pillers by which the state of the kingdome may be fortified and borne vp namely the integritie of Religion and the good will of the people The which if they were stable and firme we néede not doubt the safetie of things but if they be once cast downe as it is to be scared there must néedes followe great ruine and destruction of that hie and notable building These two things therfore must be stablished and confirmed to prelient that ruine which is like to come and to this ende as both common profite and necessitie requireth all our Councels reasons deuises and deliberations ought to tende séeing herevpon both the due obedience to the King and the conseruation of the people dependeth The which things are so ioyned togither that the one of them by anye meanes cannot stande without the other As concerning necessitie we must measure and wey the same by hauing a respect and consideration of the King and of his principall members or ministers which vnder him gouerne the people and of others also who ought to obey First of all therfore it is the Kings duty to wey cōsider whervnto he is called wherfore the Lord hath giuen vnto him the rule of so great a people In so doing he shal find that the Lord hath chosen
thus Tr●…aeus hauing no hope to preuaile by wars against these mē certified the Duke what a hard matter he had taken in hand Afterward the men of the valleys were called to parley with whom these couenantes were made namely That they shoulde vse their accustomed exerci●…es of Religion that they should by no maner of meanes be accused or called to account for this warre that they shoulde haue free libertie and intercourse to bie and sell through all parts of the Dukes dominion that they shuld render vnto the Duke all dutie and obedience belonging vnto him that they also should li●…e without offence There were diuers other particular matters which because they serue not for our purpose we omit While these things were thus handled Philip King of Spaine on the other side left nothing vndone to punishe vex with all maner of torments so many as imbraced the Gospel in any part of his dominiōs but specially in Spaine Belgio the murdering inquisitiō in euery place most cruelly was executed the houses in the which the faithfull came together were burned they which were taken were spedilye put to death some being burned some drowned some tormentes with new kinds of death yea there was no respect of persōs had were he poore or rich gentlemā or noble mā he was not frée frō these torments The king being greatly inflamed pricked forward herevnto by the Cardinall Granuellan who a little before was made Cardinall in Belgio at the creation of new bishops Neuerthelesse the faithful of the p●…rsecuted churches offer their confessiō to the king of Spaine and publish the same euery where abrode by publique writing open their cause to the magistrates shew how iniurious a thing it is to condemne a man before his cause be heard beséech that they might haue libertie to be heard that their confessiō might be read which would manifestly declare that they were vniustly condemned these troubles say they do arise of two sorts of men The first are such as are led by rashe vndiscrete zeale to defend their errors which haue long time continued in the Romish Church The second are such as are afeard to haue the Gospell preuaile bicause they know that the doctrine therof reproueth their wicked doings affections It is great arrogancie to condemne those that leane to the worde of God to prefer the inuentions of mē before the same Wherfore they desire that before they be cōdēned they might be cōuinced by the word of God that the disputatiō might not be with fire and sword for say they the word of God is the vndoubted certaine rule of truth But this was the sum of their confession We beleue in one true God which by his glorious names titles may be discerned frō false counterfeite Gods which may also be knowne by that most mighty worke of the whole world but specially by his word we also im●…race receiue the only word of God by faith not so much bicause the Church receiueth the same but bicause it is sealed in the hartes of the faithful by the holy ghost We beleue that one God in essēce is distinguished into thrée persons which are the father the sonne the holy Ghost reseruing notwithstanding to euery persō his special propertie We beleue that God which hath created the worlde doth gouerne preserue the same by his prouidence We beleue that he created man after his owne image liknesse that is to say holy good perfect that he fell by his owne faulte hath wrapped his prosteritie in y same giltinesse of sinne corruptiō that he him selfe was in We beleue that Iesus Christ both God and man in one person is a true mediator the onely meane way to saluation We beleue that he beyng promysed long before vnto the Fathers and represented and shadowed vnder the Ceremonyes and fygures of the lawe came in his time and fulfilled all things that pertayned to oure saluation and that withoute greate sacrilege and robbing him of his honor no other meane can be taken also that the faithful are partakers of these benefites which are the Church of God which is gouerned by the holy ghost and not tyed to places or perfons We beléeue that the pure and sincere preaching of Gods worde the pure Ministration of the sacraments and the discipline by the which the Churche is gouerned according to the rule of Gods worde are notes and markes of the visible Churche We beléeue that the Sacraments were ordained to confirme our faith and doe then profite when they are ioyned to the power of the holy Ghost We beléeue that there doe belong onely two sacraments to the Church namely Baptisme which is a seale of remission of sinnes and of our regeneration and therefore a testimonie of our entrance into the Churche And the Lords supper which signifieth that we are truely made partakers of the body of Christ and of all his graces and benefites that is to saye that oure soules are nourished to euerlasting life by his fleshe and bloude euen as our bodyes are nourished with breade and wine but we muste bring faith to receiue the truth of that Sacrament that is to say Christ therefore we beléeue that the Lords Supper doth only profite the faithfull bringeth to the vnworthie that is to the vnbeléeuing condemnation We beléeue that God to defende and preserue the societie of men hath ordayned lawes and pollitique gouernement which al men ought to obey that tributes custome and other taxes ought to be payed to Magistrates who ought to be reuerenced and for whome we ought to pray vnto God. We beleeue also that Christ shall come againe with al power maiestie and glory in the latter day to iudge the quicke and the dead Thus much concerning their persecution But now to returne to our selues againe When the Duke of Guise had bene at no small variance with the Prince of Conde he purposed with himselfe partlye by his owne mind in hope of profite partly by the Counsel of his friends to come into his fauour and friendship again the Quéene and the Constable exhorting him ther vnto and helping him to haue hys purpose Therefore the King when he had called the Prime Councell together and all the Princes beyng present he called both of them before hym and when the matter was opened he commaunded the Duke of Guise to declare the whole matter to the Prince of Conde The which the Duke of Guise did protesting that he neuer caused nor counselled the King which was departed to apprehend the Prince of Conde To which the Prince of Conde answered that he did counte him a wicked and naughtie person which wente aboute to worke him that mischiefe what so euer he was The Duke of Guise sayde that hée thoughte him in lyke manner to be no lesse but he coulde not helpe it At the length by the Kings
séene and the eating of breade in déede euen as if a man shoulde not receyue that wholsom medicine giuen vnto him for his health but should cause it verie sumptuously to be caryed vp and down the chamber They saye also that Paule sayd not Carie this bread about the stretes but VVhosoeuer eateth of this bread and drinketh of this wine Furthermore they say that Christe is in heauen and that therfore there is onely required a spirituall worship Wherevpon they say that great ini●…rie is done to him by those corporal and externall worships seing he exalted 〈◊〉 from earth to heauen to the end he might be worshipped and adored with true and spirituall honor And last of all they say that this rite of carying the Lords bodie vp and down was brought in and by little litle established not by any authoritie of Scripture but by the deuotion of some singular man Also that neither Clement nor Gregorie bishops of Rome whiche appointed the same to be a solemne feas●…e haue not spoken one worde of that deambulation and that therefore our sacrifi●…ing Priests do erre and offende against their will and institution seing that no other day hath such fréedome and libertie to commit all kinde of wickednesse as that hath the whiche truly is not the waye to knowledge and worshippe Christ seeing that he requireth of his disciples purenesse and newnesse of lyfe and in his holy worde vtterly detesteth all sinfull libertie The which things séeme hurtfull not onely to those whiche haue separated themselues from our felowship but also to those which will not leaue the same They doe perceyue that herevpon many things are done amis●…e as the polluti●…n of the Sacrament against the word of God and the approued customes of the Church Also that by the occasion of this day many men are a●…used and led to commit wicked and hor●…ible things and that the same day is a ver●…e pr●…uocation of most 〈◊〉 sedition as we hitherto to our great griefe haue felt Therefore except this thing be foreseene and a reme●… proui●…d for the same at the length experience will shewe that it is better to séeke a more deuoute way to worship God withall than to refeyne kepe this ryte to the hurt and offence of many The Masse also is an other greate cause of offence All men crie out that the Masse is a great offence slumbling block to the Church the same being sold of ignorant dissolute and most vngodly Priests and yet no man seeketh to reforme and amende the same This thing truly hath of late diminished the deuotion of the people very muche yea and many of our felowship do proceed further also ●…o doubt of the Masse both touching the substance and also touching the forme In the subs●…āce they doe note that the Churchemen af●…irme that the priestes do offer Christe and do more esteeme of their owne sacrifice than they d●…e of the sacrifice of Christe And that certaine of the Doctours doe saye that the same sacrifiice whiche the Priests offer is onely a monument and signe of the true sacrifice whiche Christe offered for vs once for all but the ignorāt people are taught by ignorant priests that he ought to be counted for an heretik which thinketh otherwise The which truly seeing it seemeth to be most absurd it giueth great occasion to the aduersarie to speak euil But in the forme of the Masse they note foure principall things First that all things are done in the same in a strange an vnknowne tong the which in déed is vnprofitable and dangerous séeing no fruite commeth thereof vnto the people but are onely fed with certaine outward shewes Wheras on the contrarie part say they it is necessarie that the confession of the faith shoulde be plainly and euidently vnderstode of all men and séeing the Latine tongue muste needes be vsed let the same yet be expounded into the mother tong that it may of all men be vnderstode And seing the prayers which are there made appertaine to the common profit of all the hearers who vnderstanding not what is spoken shall aunswere Amen Furthermore they saye that the consciences of the Clergie doe accuse them and tel them that they doe amisse séeing no part of the vse of their Masse is declared without the which notwithstanding the administration of the Sacramente seemeth to be but vaine Thirdly séeing those things which are spoken in the Masse doe belong to the whole congregation and not to the Pries●…es alone and specially those things whiche concerne the Communion and yet neuerthelesse one Priest only communica 〈◊〉 the people s●…anding by and looking on it séemeth ius●…ly to be ver●…e farre out o●… order and not agréeing to the truthe Wherfore they thi●…ke it 〈◊〉 that it shoulde be reduced and brought to the ancient maner of the church agréeing to the first institution ▪ Fourthly they mis●…yke the order of the diuine seruice In the which is to be co●…idered what great profi●… the singing of Psalmes and the ma●…ing of Prayers in the vulgar tong hath brought in tyme paste And truly our aduersaries of late days vsing these meanes haue allured and drawne many vnto them Wherefore let the holy Father consider if it shall not be best to giue libertie to haue the Psalmes soong and Pray●…rs also made in the vulgar toung that they maye be 〈◊〉 of all the people These are the principall poyntes whiche they sa●…e are needfull to be amended ●…en they which haue separated themselues from our felowship which they 〈◊〉 to haue taken in good part seeing they go●… not about to violate the Apostoli●…ie authoritie of the holy father and 〈◊〉 per●…ct in these two things namely that nothing be altered ●…n d●…ctrine And also that if the Minis●…ers of the Churche dō offende in any thing the Ministe●…e therefore shoulde n●…t be taken away but the authoritie thereof alwayes to remain preserued and safe These two things being firmely holden they thinke it no absurditie if diligente inqui●…ition be made of other matters which haue neede of re●…ormation Therefore she dothe humbly beséeche the holye Father that he woulde prouide for these thinges for that greater inconueniences no dout woulde folowe if so be that there were not remedie prouided in tyme As for other thinges the Quéene promiseth that she hir selfe with the counsell of good men and with hir diligence and i●…deuour will looke vnto so muche as she maye both for the peace and quietnesse of the Church and also for the dignitie of the Popes holynesse These thinges haue ben by vs faithfully gathered out of the Copie of hir owne letters ¶ The thirde Booke of Commentaries concerning the state of Religion and or the common vvealth of Fraunce IN the meane season the Prela●…es and Clergée came from all partes of the realme to a towne called 〈◊〉 néere to Sangeiman at the ●…ay appointed in the moneth of August to reason and fréely to
worde out of the bookes of the Prophetes and Apostles be made insufficient he is spoyled of his prophèticall office if newe lawes be made and layde vpon the consciences of men hée should be depriued of his kingly maiestie And if he be offered again for remission of sinnes other ways also be found out to pacifie the wrath of God althoughe it shoulde not be sufficient to haue one Aduocate and Mediator in heauen betwéene God mē he should be defrauded of his Priesthood Thirdely we agrée not neyther in the defiinition neither in the original nor in the effectes of faythe which by the authoritie of the Apostle Paule we call Iustifying by whiche only we affirme that Iesus Chryst with all his graces is made ours As touching good workes if there be any that thinke we contemne them they are vtterly deceyued For we separate no more fayth from loue than we separate lighte heate from fire And with Iohn we say He which sayth hee knoweth God and keepeth not his commaundementes is a lyer But in these thinges we confesse we disagrée in thrée speciall poyntes First of all in the originall of good woorks that is to saye from whence they come Secondely what those good workes are And thirdely to what vse they are good As touching the first principall pointe we finde no other fréewill in man than that whiche is made frée by the grace of Chryste and we affirme that our nature being in that state into the which it is falne hath néede not onely to be holpen and susteined but rather to be mortified and as it were killed by the power of the holy Ghost which founde our nature not only weakned in grace but also destitute of all strength and enemie to all goodnesse and deade yea and putrified in sinne and corruption And this honor we giue wholly vnto God neither do we think that in this matter we ought in any wise to be ioyned with god For we assigne to his grace and mercie the beginning the middle and the ende of working in vs Concerning the seconde pointe We acknowledge no other rule of righteousnesse and obedience which may stande before God than his commaundements whiche are faithfully described and put downe to vs in his worde to the whiche we thinke it not méete that any creature should adde any thing that apertaineth to the building of mens consciences or detract from the same Concerning the thirde point namely to what vse these good works are profitable We confesse that so far forthe as they come from the spirite of God working in vs hauing their beginning from so good an originall they are good and ought to be called by that name howbeit if God would examine thē according to the rigour of his iustice he should finde many things in them worthy of condemnation We say also that they are profitable for an other vse bycause by them our God is glorified men brought to the knowledge of him but we are persuaded that for so much as the holy Ghost is within vs for he is certainly knowne by those effects we are of the number of his elect and of those that are predestinate to saluation But for so much as it cōmeth in question to knowe by what title the kingdome of God appertayneth vnto vs we say with S. Paule Eternal life is the free gift of God and not a due reward of our merits For by this means Christ Iesus doth iustifie vs with his righteousnesse onely which is imputed vnto vs sanctifieth vs with his holynesse only giuen vnto vs redéemeth vs with his only sacrifice imputed vnto vs by true liuely faith of the grace liberalitie of our god Al these riches treasures are giuen vnto vs by the power of the holy Ghost vsing the preching of Gods word the administration of the sacraments to this ende not as though it hath néed of those means for God is omnipotent but bicause so it pleaseth him to apply cōform him self vnto vs by these ordinarie meanes to create nourish in vs y most precious gift of faith which is as it wer at hand to apprehend take hold of those gifts as it were a ve●…ell to receiue Christ with al his riches to saluation Moreouer we receiue only imbrace for the word of God the doctrine contained in the bokes of the Prophets Apostls called by the name of the old new Testament For who can assure certifie vs of our saluatiō but they which without exception ar the gretest witnesses And as touching the authoritie of the doctors of ancient time general coūcels before they be receiued without any examination first they shuld be compared with the scriptures then thēselues with thēselues for so much as the holy ghost is by no means contrarie to himself The which my Lords I think ye wil neuer take in hand if ye do giue vs this leaue that we may sée the matter before if we beleue that ye wil not do it But what Are we of the progenie of that wicked Cham which vncouered the priuities of his father Noe Do we think our selues to be better learned than so many gréek latine doctors Are we so wise in our own conceites that we think that we are the first which haue opened the truth Are we so arrogant as to condemne the whole world of error God forbid yea that be far from vs notwithstanding my Lords we trust you will graunt vs this that euery ancient councel euery doctor ought not to be receiued rashely for so much as there haue ben long ago many false prophets in the church of God as the Apostle in many places techeth vs Secōdly as touching those doctors which ar to be receiued seing al truth which may be found in thē necessarily ought to be drawn from the scripturs what sounder way shall we finde to profit in their writings than to examine all things by that touchstone namely by the welwayed resons cōsidered testimonies of scripture by which we ought to interpret thē No mā truly can giue vnto them more thā they wold giue vnto thēselues And these are the very words of Hierom writing vpō the Epist. of the Gala. The doctrine of the holy Ghost is that which is contained in the Canonical bokes of scripture against which to decree any thing by coūcels is not lauful And S. Aug. writing to Fortunatꝰ saith we must not so much esteme of the disputations of mē although they be catholike of great authoritie as we must esteme of the Canonicall Scripture except it bee lawfull for vs sauing the reuerence due to those men to mislyke and reiect somewhat in their writings if it be founde that they haue iudged otherwise than the truth will beare which wee or any others by the grace of God do knowe This is myne opinion in other mens wrytings and such do I wishe the readers of my works
to be The like words also he hath in his 112. Epistle Also in 37. cha of his second booke against Crescon In like maner S. Cyprian sayth VVe must not haue regarde what this or that man doth before vs but what Christe Iesus hath done who is before all Like vnto this is the rule whiche S. Augustine gaue to Hierome And in an other place also when hée disputeth againste those which woulde vse the Councell of Ariminum Neyther will I saith he alleage the Councell of Nice against you nor shall you alleage the Councell of Ariminum againste me By the authoritie of Scripture lette vs weye matter with matter cause with cause and reason with reason Chrysostome was of the same opynion as may appeare in his 49. Homely vpon Mathew For the Church is founded vpon the foundation of the Prophetes Apostles Therefore to conclude this matter we embrace the holy Scripture for the f●…l and perfect declaration of al things which appertayne to our saluation But as touching that which appertaineth to generall councels and to the bookes of the fathers we meane to vse them and we forbid not you to vse them so farre foorth as that which ye shall bring from them be not disagreeing with the worde of god But for Gods sake bring not in their bare authoritie vntill al thinges are examined by the Scriptures For we saye with S. Augustine in his seconde booke De doctrina Christiana the. 6. chapter If there bee any difficultie in the interpretation of Scriptures the holy Ghoste hath so tempered the Scriptures that what soeuer in one place is obscurely spoken in another place is more playnely and euidently reuealed And thus far concerning that Article the whiche I haue prosecuted the more largely to the end●… all men maye knowe that we are enimies neither to generall Councels nor yet to the auncien●… Fathers There remayne yet to speake of two articles namely concerning the Sacraments and Ecclesiasticall discipline The first truely deserueth a copious and long tractation by reason of the often and great controuersies euen at this day concerning the same but bycause it is not our purpose to dispute but onely to declare the specia●…l pointes of our confession it seemeth enough to me to e●…plicate the summe of our faithe We agree as I thinke in the description of the name of the Sacrament namely that Sacramente●… are visible signes by the meanes and helpe whereof the coniunction which we haue with our Lord Iesus Chryst is not only simply signified or figured but is also truely offered vnto God and is confirmed sealed and as it were grauen by the power of the holy Ghost in their mynds which with a true faith apprehend that which is so signified and offered vnto them I vse this word Signified not to weaken or abolishe the Sacramentes but to the ende I might distinguishe the signe from the thing signified Herevpon we confesse that it is alwayes necessarie in Sacramentes that there be a heauenly and supernaturall change for we say not that the water in Baptisme is simply water but a true Sacrament of our regeneration and of the washing of our soules by the bloude of Christe Neither do we say that the breade in the holy Supper of our Lorde Iesus Christe is simply breade but a Sacramente of the precious body of Christe Iesus whiche was giuen for vs and that the wine is not simply wine but a Sacrament of his precious bloud which he hath shed for vs Neuerthelesse we deny that there is any change made in substance of the signes but in the ende and vse for the which they are instituted We denie also that the same mutation is made by the efficacie of certaine wordes pronounced neyther by the intention of him that pronounceth them but by his wil only which hath ordeined this heauēly and diuine action the institution also wherof ought euidently and playnly to be expounded in the vulgar tongue that all men might vnderstand and receiue the same Thus muche concerning externall signes Nowe to come to that which is shewed and exhibited by those signes We say not that which many do who not well vnderstāding our myndes haue supposed that we haue taught namely that in the Lords supper ther is only a cōmemoration of the death of our Lord Iesus Christe Neither do we say that we are partakers of the frutes of his death passion onely in that thing but do ioyne the ground it self with the frutes whiche do come fro him to vs affirming with S. Paul ▪ The bread which we breake according to the Lords insti●…tion is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say the participatiō of the bodie of Christ which was crucified for vs The cup which we drinke is the participation of his very bloud which was shed for vs yea ●…uē in the verie same substance which he toke in the wombe of the virgin which he caried vp into heauen Behold I pray you can ye fynd any thing in this Sacrament which we séeke find not But me thinks I heare some body make answer For many wold haue vs to confesse the the bread the wine are changed not into the sacraments of the body bloud of our Sauior Iesus Christ but into the very bodie bloud of our lord Other some peraduēture wil not so vrge vs but wil haue vs cōfesse that the body bloud is really corporally in with or vnder the bread wine But here my Lordes I pray you heare me paciently a little for a time suspend your iudgements If either of these opinions shall be proued vnto vs out of the worde of God to be true we are redy to imbrace it and wholly to reteine it But it séemeth vnto vs according to the measure of oure faith that this Transubstantiation cannot be reuoked or brought to the analogie substance of faith and to sounde doctrine bicause it is wholly repugnant to the nature of Sacramentes in which it is necessarie that there remaine substātial signes that they may be true signes of the body blod of Iesu Christ. Furthermore it doth euert and confound the veritie of the humane nature in Christ of his ascentiō And as my opiniō is of Trāsubstantiatiō euē so is it also of Consubstātiatiō which hath no groūd in the words of Christe neither is it necessary to this that we be partakers of the Sacraments But if any man demaund of vs if we make Christ to be absent frō the supper we answer that we do not separate him from the supper But if we haue respect vnto the distāce of places as we must of necessitie whē we speake of his corporal presence of his humanitie distinctly considered wee affirme that his body is so far absent from the bread wine as the heauen is absent from the earth f●…r so much as we the sacraments are in earth but he is so glorified in heauē
the two principall poyntes of our confe●…ion namely concerning the Church and the Supper of the Lorde But if we mighte haue had leaue to answere at the first out of hand when those things that were spoken were yet freshe in memory we mighte haue bene able more aptly and distinctly to haue made answere But notwithstanding we will speake as God shall make vs able that it may be vnderstande in what things we agrée and in what also we doe disagree of the which I woulde to God there mighte be made a perfecte vnitie and concorde Therefore concerning the first principall poynt which is of the Church we will declare thrée things First what the Church is Secondly what are the markes of the Churche and thirdlye what is the authoritie of the same There is no doubte but that this name Church was d●…riued of the Gréeke worde which signifieth to call from one place to another But in the Scripture there are found two kindes of callings The one conioyned with the efficacie of the holy Ghost of which there is mention made in the Epistle of S. Paule to the Romaines in these words Those whome God hathe iustified he hathe called The other although it be allone with the first as touching the externall matter yet notwithstāding it is of no efficacie as touching saluation not that God is to be blamed therefore but thorough mens default which will not heare the word of god Of this thing the Lorde speaketh when he saythe Manye are called but fewe are chosen Herevpon it commeth that the name of the Churche which is a congregation of men gathered together by the voyce of God which calleth them is taken two maner of wayes For if it be taken generally for all those which doe externally professe that they doe answere to Gods calling then there is no doubt but so many reprobates and ●…ipocrites are comprehended And thus truly haue we alwayes both writtē and taught with one consent seyng that matter is very common in the Scriptures But if this worde or name Churche be taken more properlye and strictlye as oftentimes it is then we saye that it onely comprehendeth those that are predestinate and chosen of god And to the ende men maye perceiue that wee haue not deuised nor inuented this phrase of speache and much lesse this doctrine when it is sayde That the Church is the bodye of the Lorde bones of his bones and fleshe of his fleshe how can the reprobates be comprehended in this number seing they are the members of the Deuill For these two things cannot agrée together To be a member of Christ and a member of the Deuill also the which S. Augustine well vnderstoode This same distinction of the Churche that Author also vsed writing vpon the sixtie foure Psalme when he sayth The Churche fignified by Hieru●…alem began at Abel and Babilon at Caine. And yet notwithstāding in this first booke of Baptisme against the Donatistes the sixtene chapter taking the name of Churche more generally he saythe He which begat Abel Enoch Noah Abraham the Prophets begat also Cayne Ismael Dathan and such others In fine therfore let vs take that which the same Saint Augustine hath written in the forenamed booke where it is sayde that there are two sortes of men as touching the Churche For sayth he some are the members of Christe and of the true Churche and so of Gods house that they are euen the house of god But other some are in the house of God but are not the house of god For they are as the chaffe with the wheate But hereof there séemeth to aryse a question whether the Churche be inuisible the which séemeth of necessitie to be concluded for so muche as God onely knoweth his electe seing also we confesse that we beléeue the holy Church And that which is beléeued is not séene But hereby maye come great inconuenience if we haue not a more depe consideration of this matter For if the matter be so into what assemblie can we come Where shall then be the waye of our saluation except the Churche be knowne that we may cleaue vnto Christe Iesus seyng that he doth declare his vertue and sauing health in one Churche Therefore wée saye that althoughe the Churche in consideration of those things whereof we spake euen nowe can not be séene of men yet notwithstanding we haue certain notes to know to what Churche we oughte to ioyne oure selues namely the pure worde of God and the sincere administration of Sacramentes The which notes are so plaine and many●…est that wheresoeuer they shall be wée oughte to be oute of all doubte that there is the Churche of God in so muche that by the rule of Charitie we oughte to account all those for the faythfull Children of God which professe the pure Religion excepte God shall reuea●…e their hipocrisie And of this matter Saint Paule hathe giuen vnto vs a playne example when he calleth the Corinthians and Galathians Saints attributing also vnto them the name of the Church althoughe there were greate errors among them both in corruptions of doctrine and also of manners The which also he hath shewed in another place when he sayth If anye man build on this foundation Golde Siluer Precious stones Tymber Hay or Stubble c. Thus therefore we speake of the Churche not transformyng the same into fantasticall imaginations neyther yet as it séemeth vnto vs doe wée giue occasion to a●…ye man to counte vs in the number of suche as are fantasticall as the Catharistes the Donatistes and those furious Anabaptistes also that were in our time with whome diuers of our brethren oftentimes haue contended Nowe therefore I come to those notes and badges of the Churche the which we must diligently beholde seing out of the same there is no saluation neither anye manner of thing which Sathan our auncient ennme hath not gone about at all times to counterfaite and falsifie I sayde that there were two certaine and vndoubted markes namely the preaching of the word and the sincere administration of Sacramentes There are some also which adde Ecclesiasticall discipline and the fruite of the preaching of Gods worde But bicause our iniquities will not suffer these two notes to appeare therefore let vs contentour selues with those two first That the word of God is a true badge and marke of the Church it may hereby appeare that the word is compared vnto seede Therefore Paule sayth that he had begotten the Corinthians in the Lorde that is to saye by the preaching of the worde And therefore in manye places it is called meate and foode according to the saying of the Lorde My sheepe heare my voyce but they knowe not the voyce of a straunger Also the sacraments are a true note of the Church bicause the Lord would instruct vs not onely by the eares but also by the eyes and other corporall senses in so much that he would haue
the Sacramentes to be manifest testimonies and certaine and visible notes of the vnion of the faithfull first with him and secondly betwéene themselues Therefore it was sayde in the time of the olde Testament Let the man that is vncircumcised be thruste oute from among the people and therefore the maister of euery house was wont thrice euery yeare to present themselues in Hierusalem that they mighte testifie the vnitie of faith and Religion by those sacrifices Afterward the vayle being taken away and the cloase shut gate being broken open the Iewes and the Gentils grewe into one bodye not onelye by the preaching of the worde but also by Baptisme and by the holy Sacrament of the bodye and bloud of Christe And according to this Christ sayd to his Apostles Go and preache to euery creature baptizing in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost Whereby both the word and Sacraments are noted For that is to be ioyned with baptisme which Paule speaketh of the Supper saying that He gaue that which he receiued of the Lorde And this is also the verye same whiche is saide in another place That the Church is founded vpon the Prophetes and Apostles that is to say vpon Christ Iesus which is the heade corner stone that is to say the matter and substance of the propheticall and Apostolical doctrine And thus the other place of the same Apostle oughte to bée vnderstoode that the Churche is the strength and piller of truth that is to say the word of God and the same truth of God as S. Ihon sayth doth sustayne and holde vp the Church as also Chrisostome interpreteth it These are the true and visible notes of the Churche the which Church bicause it bringeth forthe the faithfull and nourisheth them with the heauenly incorruptible meate is called their mother and Nource But and if the worde be preached and the Sacramentes ministred it must néedes followe that there be pastors and teachers to whom those offices may be committed as the scriptures in diuers places testifieth and the Apostle Paule also Herevpon it commeth to passe that many adde a thirde note namely ordinarie succession from the time of the Apostles To the which we answere that suche succession ought to be greatly estéemed so long as it is rightly considered and applyed euen as the Fathers often times vsed the same against heretikes as it is to be séene in Tertulliā Irenaeus and in Augustine against the Maniches and Donatistes But bycause they set that buckser againste vs as bringers in of newe things it is necessarie that we declare what we thinke of this thing We say that there is one succession of doctrine and another of persons The succession of doctrine we acknowledge for the true and vndoubted marke of the Churche according to those things whereof we haue spoken before For althoughe the doctrine of the Gospell is neuer a whit the more worthy to be beleued for antiquitie although it commeth to passe by the iudgement of God for oure iniquities that the same is counted sometimes so newe vnto men when it shoulde be familiar and knowne yet notwithstanding the auncient continuall succession doth greatly preuaile with men euen to the farther confirming of the authoritie of the same As touching the succession of persons we acknowledge the same but vpon that conditiō that it be ioyned with the succession of the Prophetes Apostles specially in the substantiall and principall points of faith not otherwise But waye and consider that I speake of doctrine not of manners For although the integritie of doctrine of life be here vnto required that a man shoulde be counted for a good and true pastor yet notwithstanding we do not reiecte a pastor for ignorance or the diuersitie of opinions in smal matters of doctrine and for maners if so be that he kepe the foundation Thus are we taught of Christ who sayth So far forth as the Scribes and Pharisies sit vpon Moises chaire doe that which they teach and not as they do The which place S. Augustine writing vpon Ihon saith ought to be vnderstande of hirelings which neuerthelesse retaine sound doctrine not of false pastors of whō Christ speaketh saying Beware of the leuen of the Phariseis Bycause sayth S. Augustine they sit vpon Moises chaire they teache the lawe of God so God speaketh by them but if they will teach their owne doctrines ye shall neither heare nor do that which they teach Therfore to come to the matter bycause false prophetes may succéede true prophets wolues the true shepheards this truely is a sounde and manifest reason wherefore we thinke that personall succession ought not onely not to be receiued but also vtterly to be cōdemned bicause it giueth place to that which is false craftely coloureth the same least the succession of doctrine should be laid for the foundation Furthermore if personall succession should simply be taken for a true note of the Churche we muste bring forth and shew a certaine sure promise of God by which he hath bounde his grace to certaine definite places and Regions the which we thinke can in no wyse be shewed oute of the newe Testament seyng this is rather manifestly declared that there is a certain catholique or vniuersal Church bycause the particular members thereof are dispersed thoroughout the whole world euen as it pleaseth God to shew forth his iudgements vpon those whō he hath vtterly caste off or whō he chastiseth for a time and to shewe his mercy and blessings vpon those whom he preserueth or whom he newly bringeth to the knowledge of him For God shewing his vengeaunce in certaine places séemeth to abolishe atl things in so muche that there is no manner of signe of the Church left as it is come to passe in all Africa Greece in the whole East part of the world But sometime that personal succession doth decay only for a little while as it happened at Antioch in the time of Samosatene at Alexandri in the exile of Athanasius in many other Churches also so long as there were heresies among them And to be short personall succession ceassed in the time of Honorious who was condemned in the yeare of oure Lorde god D. LXXXI for the execrable doctrine of Eutiches and in the time of Iohn the xxii of that name who was condemned of Heresie excepte we shoulde saye that manyfest Heretikes maye be true pastours I omitte to speake of those things which happened in the tyme of that womā Pope IOANE and of the manifolde tumultes of the false vsurping Popes which the histories make mention of These things therfore cōsidered I conclude that if we wil rightly knowe the Churche we muste not haue regarde to personall succession but to the puritie of doctrine to the sincere administration of the Sacraments in so much that we must counte them for the true successors of the Apostles which being rightly
how For if we beholde the same in the representation of a certain general Councell first it is not likely that all the force and vertue which the holy Ghost hath powred out vpon the Church is restrained to a certaine number of prelates which are oftentimes neuer the more learned nor any whit the better although they represent all those of whō they are sent For how oftētimes may it come to passe that some one man altogether vnlearned shall haue more wisedome thā all the learned of the whole cōpany beside Ane therfore is it writtē in the Glose Thou hast declared concerning elections that one priuate faithfull mā which bringeth better reasons ought rather to be beleued than the whole coūcel the Pope But rather in the great Nicene coūcell who did let that law of chastitie which from that time brought so manie corruptions into the Church that it might not be established One onely Paphnutius not greatly learned as the storie maketh mention Furthermore at what time was there euer so generall a Councell gathered together but that not onely the greatest part of learned men and of godly men but also of Prelates was left behind And who will denie but that they which are absent haue oftentimes had the more sound and better iudgement thā those that were present Beside these things ye also my Lordes doe know what great confusion raigneth in the Church and specially in the greatest offices of the Prelacie in so much that we may say The greatest corruption hath bene in that part which ought to haue béen more per●…ect and sounde Of late we had many examples and the holy Bishoppes haue fet suche déepe sighes for these things that the sounde of them is hearde as yet And truely the saying of S. Bernard is no lesse knowne than true when he sayth Oh Lord they which loue the hyest romes and desire principallitie are the first which persecute thee they haue taken mount Sion they haue taken the arke of the couenant and by force haue set fire on the whole Citie But let this be spoken my Lordes not that I touche or meane any of you but onely to declare that seyng the principall vocations in the Churche are so fowly corrupted it cannot be that the generall Councels after so long time established by a multitude of such wicked men should be so gouerned by the holy Ghost that it cannot erre A certaine ancient Priest prophecied also although he were vngodly and wicked but it was the holy Ghost that prophecied in him being ignorant what he sayd being driuen to speake by the contrarie spirit that is to say by the spirit of the Deuill in appointing to kill an innocent namely Christ Iesus the sonne of God. Furthermore if a general Councell haue this priuiledge that it cannot erre neither in the rule of doctrine nor in the forme of maners we demaunde when and at what time it obtained this priuiledge For there was neuer at any time but one faith one Church And the Prophetes do plainly declare and the histories doe euidently confirme the same that the ancient Church in the tyme of the olde Testament hath erred All the beholders thereof are blinde sayth the Prophet they knowe nothing they are dumbe dogges And the Prophet Ieremie sayth From the Prophet to the Priest all haue gone astray And least this should be restrained to the life of singular men it is expressely sayde in the fourtene chapter of the same Prophet They prophecie lyes and set forthe a false vision Also the Prophet Esay sayth The wisedome of the wyse shall perishe and the intelligence of those that vnderstand God shall put out the eyes of the prophetes Moreouer in Ezechiel it is sayde The lawe shall departe from the Priest. But who slewe the Prophetes who put the sonne of God to death who cōdemned the Apostles but onely the Prelates and hie Priestes of the Iewes If any man obiect and say that these things happened in the time of the olde Testamente we reply that this is no answere for bicause it shal be alwayes a strong conclusion that the congregation of the Prelates or Papistes of the Church although it be vniuersal at the last is gouerned rather by the spirite of error than by the holye Ghoste Secondly if we come to the newe Testament hath not the Apostle Paule plainely admonished the Churche in the person of the Ephesians that wolues shall come forthe from among the shepeherdes and also that the sonne of perdition shall sit in the Temple of God And certainely yf the councels be compared one with another manye contrarieties shall be found in them in so much that we must néedes confesse that they were not alwayes led and ruled by the holy Ghost but rather that Sathan hath transfigured himselfe into the lighte of the generall Councels to couer and hide his lye and error There is also another place of S. Augustine in the which he hath these words The Epistles of particular Bishoppes are corrected by prouinciall Councels and the Epistles of prouinciall Councels by generall Councelles when as by experience that which was before hidden is now manifest and knowne This place I alledged before in my firste oration to the which my lord Cardinal made answere that it ought to be vnderstoode of external matters which might ought to be altered as necessitie shuld require But y who le matter being more diligently considered it shal appéere that the worde corrected which Austine vseth doth presuppose some error which was afterward amended And S. Austine in that place dothe not intreate of externall discipline but of one speciall point of doctrine namely of the sentence of Ciprian and of the councell of Africa which concerned Rebaptizing If also this place be obiected against vs as where our sauiour Christ saith that He will be in the middest of two or three that are gathered togither in his name hereby to proue that this promise doth appertaine rather to a general councell than to a fewe men We answere that we may thus thinke of this promise but there is great difference betwéen our imagination a most certaine knowledge For seyng the wickednesse of men is growne to that passe that it abuseth the name of God to a lie there may be some which hauing the name of God in their mouth carry his aduersarie the Deuill in their heartes we do affirme that in so great infirmitie of humane wit amidst so many troublesome desires he is in gret daūger to be deceiued which only leaneth to mēs iudgements and to the external shew of a councell What thē shal we say that the doctrine of the Church seing the Church may erre is vncertaine Nothing lesse For we confesse that although we sée in part as S. Paule saith and so error may be ioyned with the truth yet notwithstāding God wil not suffer the knowledge of the principal groūdes of our saluatiō
maner of kissing one another in going bareheaded in signe of authoritie which is cōtrary to the common custome of many people All these things therfore ought to be considered before a custome be established as apostolicall least the Apostolicall authoritie and custome be abused to the disturbing of the churches as it came to passe after the Apostles tyme for the feast of Easter and in the Apostles time for the authoritie of the Church of Hierusalem as appeareth by Luke How then shall we thinke that the Apostles founde oute so many ceremonies in which afterwards was placed remission of sinnes when as plainely they haue testified the contrarie Augustine complained of these things long ago and there is no doubte but that if he had bene in these our dayes he shoulde haue had greater occasione to complaine To be short therfore we wishe that the Scripture which is very plaine in these matters maie Iudge betwene traditions that are good and euil betwéen holy and prophane betwene profitable and hurtful and betwene such as are necessary and those that are super flucus The which being graunted this question may easily be resolued namely VVhether the Church be aboue the scripture The which questiō semeth so absurde vnto me as if a mā shuld demaund whether the father were inferior to the sonne or whether the wife were aboue the husband or mā aboue God. And truly the true Church neuer complaineth and murmureth against God in this matter but alwaies modestly submitteth it self vnto him Neither maketh it any matter that the Church was before the Scriptures For that word which was afterwardes written is more ancient thā the Church seing of the same the Church was conceiued begotten brought forth hath also of the same his denominatiō And to disproue this the saying of S. Austine is brought against vs when he saith I would not beleue the scripture were it not that the authoritie of the church did force me thervnto But we must consider that S. Austine speaketh here in the person of Manichaeus For whē two mē do contend about the truth of some instrument to whom in the end shal they go but to the Scriuener or Notary that hath the first draught or coūterpane of the same Notwithstanding it doth not here vpō folow that the authoritie of the instrument doth depend vpō the person of the Notary the which should be no lesse firme and strong althoughe the Notarie being aliue woulde refuse to giue testimonie of the same The same answere muste be made to those whiche thinke the authoritie of the Canonicall bookes of scripture to depende vpon the determination of the Church But I will content my selfe to adde vnto that wherof I haue spoken before one only argument confirmed by the authoritie of certaine approued Fathers The argument is this Christe him selfe did so muche estéeme of the doctrine of the Prophet that he sought to confirme hys doctrine by their testimonies After the same maner the Apostle Paule went about to confirme the Thessalonians in his doctrine Peter also the Apostle commendeth vnto vs and alloweth this order of teaching Therefore it is not méete that they which call them selues Christ his vicars and the successors of Paule Peter shuld refuse the same condition Furthermore thus sayth Saint Hierō The error either of the fathers or of the elders ought not to be followed but the authoritie of Scriptures And Chrisostome sayth He which will knowe which is the ●…ue Church of Christ Howe shall he knowe the same in so great confusion of likenesse but by the Scriptures Also in the same place he sayth Let them whiche are in Iudea flee into the mountaines that is to say They which are in Christianisme let thē busie themselues in the Scriptures But why would he haue all Christians at that time be occupied in the scriptures Bycause so soone as heresie hadde entered into the Churches there coulde not be had a true probation of Christianisme neither can they which would knowe the truth of faith finde any other refuge than the holy scripture Whosoeuer therefore woulde know the true Church of Christ how shuld he know the same but by the Scriptures In like maner the Lorde knowing that there should come so great confusion in the latter dayes commaundeth Christians which will haue the assurance of true faith to haue no other refuge than the holy Scripture otherwise if that they seeke for other meanes they shall be offended and perishe not vnderstanding what is the true Church and so shal fall headlong into the abhomination of desolation which is placed in the holye place of the Churche Also Basill sayth If whatsoeuer be not of faith be sinne as sayth the Apostle and faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God then whatsoeuer is beside that worde giuen by diuine inspiration is sinne Also in the sermon of the confession of Faith he saith If God be faithfull in all his woordes and if all his commaundementes be firme and certaine for euer framed in truth and righteousnesse it is a forsaking of the faithe and a poynt of arrogancie to retect any part of those things which are written or to bring in any thing not written Thus far O Quéene we haue answered copiouslye according to our knowledge to the first principall point of the Oration made by the Prelates concerning the authoritie of the Churche being readie paciently and quietly to heare whatsoeuer shall be shewed contrary to that which we haue spoken There remaineth yet to be spoken of the Article of our Lords Supper the which if it seeme good vnto your Maiestie I will nowe pretermit both for that I haue heide you and the whole companie ouer long and also bicause we desire to haue this conference hereafter framed in better order Notwithstāding if it shal séeme good vnto your Maiestie that wee procéede anye farther we are readie to vtter those things which the Lorde shall put in oure heartes alwayes submitting our selues vnto those things which shall be obiected vnto vs oute of the Scriptures moste humblye praying and beseeching your Maiestie O Queene to be fully persuaded in this one thing that nexte vnto the glorye of oure God wée wishe and desire nothing more vehemently than the dignitie of your Maiestie and the peace tranquillitie of the Realme After that Beza had thus ended his oration then the Cardinall beckning to Claudius Espensius a Sorbonist willed him to make his oration Thē Espensius beginning to shew that not long agoe he had wished to haue this mutuall conference and that he alwayes vtterly abhorred those cruell punishmentes which were vniustlye vsed againste those which imbraced the Religiō he sayd that those things which were alreadie spoken of the Church and of the markes and succession of the same were in his iudgemente verye true adding herevnto that if this way had been taken in hande at the first all controuersies had been by this
loke for imposition of handes of the Phariseys that he might execute that office which God had committed vnto him And when he woulde confirme his Apostleship he speaketh not onely of the Myracles whiche he had done but also of the fruites of his preaching The which also we may say of so many kingdomes and prouinces which haue receiued the Gospell by our preaching notwithstanding so many lettes and impedimentes to hinder the same and we thinke that there cannot be required of vs a more firme confirmation of oure Ministerie seyng the vertue and power of God is manifest in vs the which neither bondes neither imprisonment neither fire neither banishments nor death could let Albeit sayth Espensius bring ye me one onely example done a thousand fiue hundred yeare agone like vnto yours Al things sayth Beza that haue happened are not put down in histories but howsoeuer the matter be it doth not folow that this our example is not manifest inough and set forth of God in his due time who went not about to giue a new Gospell but ment to renewe that olde Gospell which was exquisitly written by the Apostles and sufficiently confirmed by Miracles And so by a certain vnwonted and singular meane or way he caused that bright light to shine But concerning Traditions what foolishe madnesse is it to make them either equall with the Scripture or else more certaine than the same bicause of the diuersitie of interpretations For what shall be the staye and foundation of oure faith if we stande in vncertaine opinions But what so euer men do this notwithstanding is most certainely to be imbraced That truth shall be most firme and constant although for a time it seme neuer so obscure and although heretikes do abuse it yet neuerthelesse ought we alwayes to leane to the same Also touching the place of Tertullian which Xainctius willeth me so diligentlye to consider I haue so certainely considered the same as I am sure he hath falsely cited Chrisostome in whom that shal neuer be founde which he hath falsely fayned We will not denie but that Tertullian was deceyued in certayne places and yet notwithstanding the place cited beyng rightly vnderstoode and the ende thereof considered it shall be verie easie to be expounded For it was his purpose to declare that we muste not dispute in vayne against heretikes but as the Apostle Paule sayth they beyng once or twice reprehended must be reiected But shewe vnto vs with what Heretikes he had to doe surely euen with those whiche being conuicted by the worde of God obstinately thrust in certaine testimonyes of scripture transformed to maintaine their errors Against these men Tertullian bringeth in the traditions of the Churche the whiche he sheweth ought to be of greater waight than the new deuises of many men First of al therfore it is méete that we should be conuinced by the word of God that we may be brought from error For if we should simply leane vnto traditions which are neither Apostolical nor agréeing to their doctrine we should set open a way to a thousand deceites and at length peruert and ouerthrow the certaintie of the Scripture And why dothe Tertullian cast the heretikes in the ●…éeth saying that They contrary to Scripture doe beleeue without Scripture but onely to teache them that they must leane and cleaue to the certaine truth of the Scriptures and by them conuince errors But if the traditions and ceremonies which are at this daye obiected vnto vs of our aduersaries were Apostolicall and alwayes vsed of the Churche we might otherwise thinke and determine but seyng we can shew their beginnings it followeth that they are not come from the Apostles And truely Tertullian dothe greatly reprehende them which thought that all things whiche appertained to saluation were not put downe to vs by the Apostles Therfore when truth comes in question we must haue recourse to the Apostles whom Christe hath sent to teache the Churche But how shall we agrée of the Apostles doctrine but by their writings For therefore were they called of God to that office that they might plainely teache and instructe vs in all things that appertained to our saluation After the same maner also the place of Chrisostome may be explaned in the which we haue these words Christ lefte nothing to the Apostle in writing did he therefore forbyd them to leaue anye thing in writing No truely But he dyd rather illuminate them by his holy spirit to the ende his doctrine being put in writing mighte abide for euer Howbeit the Apostles taughte certayne things which they haue not written We denie it not But we say that those things whiche they haue not written doe not appertaine to oure saluation For those things whiche mighte appertayne to certaine rytes profitable for that time and to the order and gouernement of the Churche they haue shewed and declared by woorde of mouthe But bycause those things are of suche condition that they maye be diuersely altered accordyng to the circumstaunces of the place tyme and persons therefore they neither oughte nor can bynde the consciences of men And as concerning these wordes Not begotten Consubstantiall Trinitie and suche like althoughe they be not to be founde so expressely in the Scripture yet notwythstanding their sense effect and meaning is plentifully to be founde therein Wherevpon afterwards to auoyde the subtil ●…lightes of heretikes these and such like wordes were founde out and receiued of the ancient fathers Thus Beza answered to those obiections that white Monke 〈◊〉 in the meane time crying out against him interrupting him and still inculcating this thing that neither the virginitie of the virgin Marie nor the baptizing of infantes coulde be proued by testimonies of Scrip●…ure And thus crying and exclaming still after the manner of scholes he was verie troublesome to the whole assembly At the last after this confused disputation to and fro the Cardinall of Loraine perceiuing the inciu●…litie of his fellowes as it may seeme least they should be reprehended of the Quéene he himselfe ended this controuersie as though the question had ben sufficiently handled Upon which silence the Sorbonistes afterwards persuaded them selues to haue gotten the victorie Then the Cardinall began to speake concerning the Lordes Supper protesting in the name of al the Prelates that they woulde procéede no further vntill that question were fully determined and answered both for that it was the principall pointe of all controuersies and also bycause the Ministers hadde so playnely declared their opinion and iudgement concerning the same in that their first Oratiō that the rumoure thereof is gone thoroughout the whole Realme Therefore he demaunded of the Ministers whether they woulde receiue and imbrace the Augustane Confession And the Ministers on the contrarie part demaunded if they also would receiue the same The Cardinal faring as though he woulde answere to this demaunde began to bring for the the iudgement of certaine Ministers of
Germanie concerning the Lords Supper the whiche he sayde was sent by them to him out of Germanie But herein he played the craftie Foxe to the ende that if they had openly denyed this thing he mighte haue set them and the Ministers of Germanie togither by the eares but if they had imbraced the same that then hee mighte tryumphe ouer them as if they had gotten the victory Beza to auoid this Dilemma and subtill traine answered That he and his fellowes came thyther to defende the confession of their owne Churches whiche they were onelye by them inioyned to doe So that he desired that the order of the disputation might be framed vpon the forme of their confession to the end that they might gather thereby bothe the greater fruit and also come into a more perfect concord For the order of nature doth require that firste of all those things which are more easie shoulde be handled and we must first of all dispute of doctrine bycause the Sacramentes doe depende of Doctrine Notwithstanding the Cardinall did with no lesse vehemencie still vrge the matter Therefore the chosen men of the Churches fearing least by this meanes occasion mighte be taken to breake off the conference and that the blame thereof shoulde be layde vpon them they desired to haue leaue to vewe and consider that writing whereto the Prelates wente aboute to make them to subscribe and so they woulde deliberate together what they were best to doe Then was broughte for the a fourme of the article concerning the Lords Supper written as the Cardinall said oute of the Augustane confession thus VVe doe Confesse that the very body and bloud of Christ Iesus is truely really and Sacramentally in the Supper of the Lorde and is so giuen and receiued of those that doe communicate There were also broughte forthe manye opinions of the Saxone Ministers concerning this matter written in the yeare of oure Lorde 1559. And thus was the assembly dismist vntill another day In the meane time newes was broughte that the writing exhibited by the Cardinall of Loraine was by the industrie of one Frances Balduine sente with letters whiche signifyed that he woulde come verie shortly and bring certaine ministers with him out of Germanie which shoulde dispute and contend with Beza and with the rest of the challengers of the reformed Churches Balduine therfore came to Poossiac in the time of the conference leauing notwithstandyng behynde him those ministers of Germanie making the more haste to the intent he mighte offer vp a certayne Latine booke intituled The office of a godly man among the controuersies of Religion perswading himselfe by this meanes that he shoulde please all men specially the Byshoppes And this Booke he highlye commended and bragged of as a certaine singular meane and waye to worke peace and vnitie the author of the which booke the miserable ambitious man partlye affyrming and partlye denying hymselfe to be by vayne dissimulation the name of Cassander beyng suppressed and quite taken awaye whiche had patched the same together would that all men should haue counted hym to bée the authour thereof perswading hymselfe hereby to wyn greate fame But his expectation for all this was deceyued for he was called of neyther part into the conference for that all men feared his inconstancie and lighte rashenesse whiche he had all his lyfe time shewed by manyfest proofe and shewe of his subtill and false minde But his hatred for this matter was wholly kindled against the Ministers of the reformed Churches whom he thought to be the cause that he was not called to the conference Afterwardes he inueyed againste Caluine and Beza who by theyr answere agayne declared by euident argumentes that he was giltie of a lye of falsehoode and of impietie That is to saye Balduine not long agoe ●…ayned to loue the Gospell and declared the same also by setting forthe of bookes and was conuersaunt in the refourmed Churches whereby among good men he had gotten a good reporte notwithstanding chaunging oftentymes his Religion one while he séemed to imbrace the doctrine of the Gospell going to those places in the whiche the same was publiquely preached another whyle he wente to the Papistes seeming to lyke of their seruice whereby at the last all men iustly Iudged hym to bée of a wycked and vnconstant mind Therefore after he hadde experience and proofe of diuers Religions shyfting oftentymes from one to another the subtill fellowe thought that he had at the last founde oute a certayne vndoubted fourme of Religion and reported abroade that he knewe a sure meane or waye to appease all controuersies for Religion And beyng broughte vnto the King of Nauarre by the practise of the Cardinall of Lorayne hée made hym to haue a wonderfull opinion of him And whilest the King of Nauarre was greatly disturbed with the fayre promyses of the Pope of the whiche wée wyll speake anon thys fellowe dayly called vpon him who also bringing forthe argumentes oute of certayne auncient notes and abbreuiations whiche he sayde hee hadde founde by chaunce he put the Kyng of Nauarre in suche hope to get the Kingdome of Nauarre that his loue and zeale towardes the Gospell waxing colde by little and lyttle at the laste he vtterlye renounced and forsoke the Gospell to the greate detrimente and hurte of the reformed Churches and of the whole Realme of Fraunce in furtheryng whereof before tyme he had notwithstandyng béene very diligent Balduine for brynging these things to passe receiued for his reward a great summe of money and had also committed vnto him the charge to bryng vp the kyng of Nauarres bastard for which he receiued a stipend But nowe againe they come to the Conference so that when they were all assembled togyther and leaue giuen to the Ministers to speake Beza pronounced this Oration before the Quéene We declared of late before your Maiestie noble Quéene according to our skil our opinion concerning the Article propounded vnto vs of the Church and of the markes and authoritie of the same in opening of the which things we haue so followed the word of God that we trust no man hath had iust occasion to complaine of vs But for so muche as those things which haue bene opened by vs ought either to be approued or else to be reprehended by the worde of God it was euen nowe demaunded of vs by what authoritie wée would preach the worde of God and minister the holy Sacramentes in the which demaunde to make our cause to be hated there was lefte nothing vndone We knowe not to what end these things haue bene propoūded For first of all we came not hyther eyther to preach the word or to minister the Sacraments So that it séemeth superfluous to demaund of vs by what authoritie we would doe this thing If answere be made vnto vs that this was therfore demaūded that we might giue account of those thinges whiche we haue done afore time it was to be cōsidered that this
should séeke to escape by flight crying out moste outrageously against thē and incouraging his soldiers to the slaughter Who making a violent assault fell vpon the fearefull and trembling multitude and suche as sought to escape by flight or by climing vp to the top of the house they slew without pity or mercy yea whomsoeuer they met withall were they men or wemen olde or yong they put them to the sword most cruelly against all humanity making hauocke of them all together In the meane time the clamors howlings and pitifull cries of these innocent shéepe appoynted to the slaughter were not ceased but were made wyth the sound of the trumpet whych blew all the time of the flanghter to be more dolefull and terrible to all those that hearde the same Wher vpon the Duches of Guise the Dukes wife walking by chaunce by the walles of the citye and hearing this feareful noise was abashed therat In so much that shée sending straight way a messenger to her husband earnestly desired and beséeched him to cease and mak●… an ende of that miserable slaughter least wemen great with childe in the city hearing that fearful noise should be deliuered before their time Therefore the Duke of Guise being troubled and somewhat terrefied with hys owne horrible and wicked enterprise commaunded a retreit to be blowne And then was brought to hym the Preacher whom he miscalled and reuiled at hys pleasure and then committed him to the charge and custody of a souldier But yet for all this the soldiers ceased not to slay and kill committing murder in diuers places of the citye and defiling the streates wyth bloude yea with the bloud of innocents to describe the whych as it was don in déede by these bloudy butchers it wold abhorre any christian heart to heare At the last when they had made an ende of killing and slaying they searched throughoute euery corner of the place where the people had assembled them selues together they ouer●…hrew the seates and benches that were therein and brake them to péeces they did cut the holy Bible in péeces yea and the rascall soldiers spake thus of the same What shal I do with this word of God I passe not for it I can make no money of this geue me therefore the golde the siluer and apparell It cannot be vttered with what and howe many blasphemies the gospell was blasphemed The Cardinall Guise also had in his hande a certaine Bible which was found in the pulpet Of him the Duke of Guise demaūded what booke it was The Cardinall answered that it was the holy scripture What holy scripture is it sayeth he and loking vpon the first leafe of the booke he sayde that that booke was not made aboue two yeres since shewing by hys warlike rudenes and ignorance what litle knowledge and vnderstanding he had of the word of God. At the last euen as if the city had ben ouer runne and vanquished by the forraine enemy the lackeis and seruing men fayning the voyce of a Crier sold gowns coates cappes and w●…mens apparell to the popish sort of the towne which greatly scorned derided the faithfull The houses also of the outdwellers and borderers vppon the citie were despoyled and many by the waye as they went were euill intreated and slaine Then the Duke of Guise commaunded the kéeper of the Castell to come before him whome he sharply reprehended because he knew of those sermons that were made in the Citie and threatned to punish him commaunding him to follow him Many also of the townesmen were led away with them bound The Minister or Preacher of whom we spake before being sore mangled and wounded and lying groueling vppon a Ladder was so caried by the commaundement of the Guise to a towne called Sandiser being derided miscalled and euill intreated as he went. Now the fame of this horrible act and butcherly slaughter was brought by and by to the Churches bordering therabouts and thereof also diuers rum●…rs and reports arysing it was diuersly reported in the Kyngs Court and sodenly astonished and amazed all those that heard of the same vntill within few dayes after certaine messengers came from Vassi and from certaine of the Churches thereabouts certifying the truth of the matter and complayning of the horrible fact e●… the Gui ses and making humble supplicatiō that remedy might be prouided for so great a mischiefe●… adding hereunto that the true subiects of the King could not beare any longer the great crueltie and iniuries of the Guises being straungers The matter being thus reported séemed to all men very presumptuous rash Insomuch that the Prince of Conde the Chastilons the Chauncelour others cried out against the same saying that it was a wicked and horrible act and against the Edicts and lawes of the Realme and that therfore it was nedefull to prouide a present remedie Notwithstanding the dayly rumors of the comming of the Guises to Paris caused al mē to feare foreséeing diuers great troubles and calamities like to ensue At this time the King was at Monceaulx a house belonging to the Quéen his mother who was there also accompanied with the Prince of Conde But the King of Nauar the Martiall of S. Andrew the Brissac were at Paris to whom straight waye also came the Constable Now the Duke of Guise was come to Nantuille a place of his dominion and it was reported that he woulde come the next daye to Paris The Prince of Conde much marueiled at this sodaine and hasty comming of the Guises to Paris after the comitting of so wicked presumptuous a déede against the kyngs Edict He went therfore to the King and Quéene and declared that the matter was such that except a remedie were prouided in time great destruction would fall vppon the whole Realme Wherfore he wished that so great a mischiese might might procéede no farther For saith he if the Duke of Guise come to the Citie there will followe present perill of most gréeuous calamities The Quéene the Kinges mother liked well of this aduise of the Prince and agréed to the same Therfore she wrote to the kyng of Nauar exhorting him according ●…o his office to sée that the kinges Maiestie and the Realme also fell into no perill and chargeth the Guise also by her letters not to come to the citie but to come him self to the King with a few only wayting vpō him To the which the Guise aunswered that hée was busie in entertayning his fréendes and could not come Whereu●…pon the Quéene wrote her letters againe but in vai●…e Therfore after deliberation had the Duke of Guise came to Paris the twenty day of March with his brother the Duke of Aumal the Martiall of Saint Andrew which came to him to Nantueile and with a great many noble men more and with a great Armie of horsemen also And entering into the citie there went to méete and entertayne him the chief master of the marchaunts a man of great
both before and in the time of the late troubles Diuers other places also were spoyled of this frée vse of their Religion who notwithstanding had it the. vii of March at the earnest entreatie not onely of certaine Nobles who were méere Lordes of those places but also of suche as were onely gouernours substituted and put in truste by your highnesse grace and fauour which is nothing else but a ●…lat breach of the Edict The Edict without any distinction or difference gyueth frée libertie of Religion to All men in euery place but by the interpretation of Rossillon al they he or she who came from any abbeyes or Nunryes are debarred from his fréedome compelled to returne to their Cloysters and there to liue according to the Canons of popishe traditions and yet the preface of that interpretation saith it was not made to derogate any thing frō the Edict the wordes of the exception be these That all Priestes and all other men or women that haue receiued the orders of Monachisme and forsaking that estate haue maryed wyfes eyther in the time of the former broyles or after the pacification therof be compelled to forsake and renounce those Mariges and to returne to their former kynde of liuing and therein to lyue accordyng to the rules and orders appoynted ●…or them Which thing besides that it dothe manifestly violate the Edict whiche permitteth euery man to liue according to his own conscience doth flatly repugne stand against the commandement of almightie God who is author and fautor of Matrimonie It woulde also bréed great strife and dissention in the Monasteries and religious houses In the declaration of Rosillō is also adioyned an interdict and prohibition of Synodes not onely contrarie to the Edict but also flat against diuers others of your Maiesties letters and commaundementes For althoughe the Edict doe not expresely make mention of them nether doth fla●…ly forbyd them yet doth graunt the vse of such religion as is reformed it muste néedes follow that it doth permit them especially for that they doo appertaine to that religion and are not onely as accidents and things belonging to it but are also the very maintayners and as it were the synewes wherewith that religiō is gouerned This kind of Synodes the auncient fathers in olde tyme dyd vs●… very often before generall Councels were knowen And surely the vse of them is so necessarie bothe for the rooting vp of Heresies and corruptions of liuing whiche doe day●…y créepe into the Churche and also to ●…epe awaye and debarre al wicked and vngraci●…us persons from the communitie of the Sacramen●…es and other godly ceremonies that without them it is impossible euer to 〈◊〉 vnto anye true and sincere puritie either of life or doctrine and yet we doe not meane that any vnlawfull or to high authoritie should be practised in them Neither is there anye thing that we more earnestly desire then that your Maiestie woulde appoynte certaine men at your graces discretion to be presente with vs at those our Synodes and so shoulde all suspicion of false and cauilling opinions be quite taken away Besides these violent wrestings and breaches of the Edict which are the only cause of all sedition those that did make and frame them haue perswaded your highnes that it was necessarie for the better obseruation of them to appoint and set downe penalties for all such as did violate them and yet made pro●…estation in their pre faces that those interpretatiōs were not made to der●…gate any thing from the Edict where as it is most manifest that no more effectuall and forcible way could be inuented quight to abolish and ouerthrow it Confiscation and losse of goodes house and land is appointed for them as though they were rebelles and traitoures to your grace Whereby it is euident that these fellowes which do abuse your maiesties name and authority are most wickedly bent to destroy your highnes subiectes and vtterly to deface and raze the noblest and most honorable families of your kingdome to the great decay and ruine of your faithfull and loyall subiectes which when they haue done it will be to late to repent And as for my self and all other of the reformed religion w●…e are so fully perswaded of your maiesties goodnesse and clemencie towardes vs that we do not thinke it to bee your wil and pleasure that such sharpe and seuere punnishmentes should be executed vpon vs But such is the wilfull and outragious lust of many your graces Lieuf tenantes and officers that they bestowe wholy al their tra●…aile and diligence both of body and mind to se these clauses and interpretations obserued and only endeuoring themselues to destroy vs will and doe thinke this occasion good enough by examination of our doinges to trouble and endaunger vs If so bee they can but espie the protestants resorting to make their praiers to God or els to heare his holy woord in any other places then those that be appointed for them or if they go to any other Noble mannes house then his whose subiectes and seruantes they be Which certainly doth make nothinge either with or against the duty they owe to your maiestie or the cōmon publique vtility of the Realme But when as they sée before their faces slaughters seditions and most daungerous and ●…amentable occasions of new tumults and breach of peace then they turne their backes and winke at them in such manner deale with vs that they had rather graunt commission of enquirie out against them that were spoyled and are plain tife then once to make proffer that they are willing to administer Iustice equally to all men for the restraint of the cruell rage of so bloudy murtherers who as it is manifest by the impunitie of all outrages cōmittd vppon vs ▪ are defended maintained and set on by them as thoughe we were abhorred detested of your highnesse and not in the nomber of your faithfull subiectes And how true this is dayly examples do make to euident Newes commeth euery day of slaughters and seditions out of all quarters of your kingdome but no word of ani punishment executed for them And besides infinite murthers and hauocke made in other Prouinces vppon the faithfull your maiestie may behold those which were cōmitted at Creuan in Maynes in Prouance in Aquitaigne in Puy and that lately done at Tours For which wee neuer to this day could procure any kind of redresse may so vnpossible it is to ge●… remedy that in diuers places commandement was giuen that such mat ters should not come in question and trial yea which is more the commissioners did sit against those that were spoiled which thinge did not only greuously trouble thē that had sustained damage and iniurie but did also encourage and enbolden the hartes of the seditious And diuers other that might haue bin repressed with litle labour were by this example animated and hartened to perseuer in all kind of violence and rapine Wherefore ii
which were not entered into the cities More ouer when the Inhabitants of the Churche of Lions made request vnto the Kinge that they might haue liberty to exercise the reformed Religiō answere was geuen them that the Kinge would not haue the administrati●… of that Religion in the city but woulde shortly app●…int thē a place without the citye But not only the liberty of the Religion was taken from them but also leaue to go home to theire owne houses Yea bloudy murther Rapines were cōmitted throughout the city of Liōs the people she winge theire outragiouse madnes euen vpon the very houses of the faithfull At Paris by the comminge of the Kinges letters the Garrisons of warders and wachemē were increased in diuers places throughout the city vpon the bridges watchmē were set to warde the people also had leaue to arme them selues whereby it manifestly appered that the deathe of protestants with in the city was conspired In the meane tyme the popishe Prelates in theire Sermones on the other parte encouraged theire mē to warre but specially the Iesuites of which there were greate nōbers in euery principall city of the Realme these were pestiferouse Locustes procedinge out of the bottomles pyt and sent abroade to be troublesome vnto men in his laste age These I saye in theire Sermones tohght that there ought to be no faith kepte with here●…iques nor any agrement made that it was a godly and meritoriouse dede to laye violent hādes vpō suche vngodly men and that al Christian people ought to arme them selues against them Beside this they brought also examples of suche as were killed by the Leuites at the cōmaundement of Moses of those which had woorshipped the golden Cal●…e of Iehu which by dissimulation shut vp the Preistes of Baale and shewe them Thus the people beinge styrred vp and pricked forward boath with the vngodly persuasions of suche preachers and also with the wordes of mighty men were dayly more more inflamed to ●…uror madnes Moreouer it was geuē for the that it was the Kings will and pleasure that the Huguenotes shoulde be vtterly destroyed and that it woulde please him very well if the Catholikes would do what they coulde too hinder the execution of the Edicte and also that all his subiectes might be brought to one vniformity of Religion Whereby the people were prouoked a freshe sought nothinge more than to arme thē selues again●… the faithful who were now as naked mē by the meanes of the Edicte Thus the people were brought to tumult and not only by the meanes aforesayd ▪ but also by societies and cōfraternities made in diuers places which they called the Confraternities of the holy Ghost ▪ By these Fraternities which confirmed and moderated by consistories did they prouide money and souldiers for the warre Therfore whē a great number of men were gathered togither at Diuinion for this confraternitie the common sort of people began to cast forth sedicious words threatening the faithfull that they should haue only thrée monethes vse of their goods to liue by after that haruest and grape gathering was done affirming that the Kyng himselfe if he would should not alter there purpose and if he once sought to hinder it they would make a Moonke their king Therfore the raynes of impudent boldnes being losed all things began to war out of order throughout the whole Realme The faithfull wanted both armour and Cities all passage both by hill and dale by water and by land were restrained the Catholiques were very strong in each condition with all thinges in a readines for the warre so that the faithful being thus h●…mmed in on euery side might continually loke for nothing but sodaine death and destruction And in déede al meanes waies were sought to bring this thing to passe and as the Cardinall sought diligent ly to bring this to effect so wanted he no necessary seruants and wayters to fulfill his commaundements throughout all partes of the Realme Also to the end his purpose might haue the better successe he thought good to followe the counsaile of the Duke of Alba with whom he consulted oftentimes by messengers which was That the principall heades of those that professed the said Religion should bee taken and then the rest would bee tamed well inough Wherfore hée sought diligently by al waies possible to take the prince of Conde the Admirall the Andelot and Cardinall Odet his brother Rochfoucalt and diuers other noble men of the reformed Religion In the meane time notwithstanding very louing and fréendly letters were sent to the prince of Conde in the Kyng and Quéenes names But so great libertie wherof we spake before being giuen to the furious and outragious people was not Idell It would abhor any Christian mind to heare the declaration of so many horrible murthers which happened in so short a time I meane not to repeate al if I would I cannot Straite after the proclamation of the Edict the people of Ambian a faire citie in Picardie ▪ assembled themselues togither and conspiring the death of the faithfull slew of them to the number of a hundered and forty ▪ At Altisiodor otherwise called Auxer a citie of Borgondy which was rendered vp by the faithfull there were fiftie slayne and their dead bodies cast openly into cannells of the streates ▪ At Rhane at Orleans at Bery at Sanleonard and at diuers other cities horrible murthers were committed vppon the faithful as they went to their churches to diuine seruice Also Monsure Cipiere the sonne of County de Tande Lieuetenant of Prouance a young man about the age of twentie yeres was also cruelly slaine at Forū-Iuly a citie of Prouance It was reported that commaundemēt came from the court that this Monsure Cipiere should be slaine The manner of this slaughter was this Monsure Cipiere was retorned from Nice whether he went to sée how the Duke of Sauoy his kinsman did of whom he was very honorably entertayned but whē he came nere to the towne of Forum-Iuly he perceiued that some laye in a bushe in the wood hard by for him wheruppon he fled with all spéede into the citie with his whole traine which were in number thirtie and fiue Then they which lay in waite being three hundered armed men hauing Baron de Arsi their captaine en tered also into the citie and crying Toxcin or Alleyum a great number of people were gathered togither by by to the number of a thousand and two hundred who beset the house in the which Cipiere was round about But the Consulls and Magistrates of the citie being carefull for Monsure Cipiere made intreatie to the peo ple and at the length brought to passe that Baron de Ar si promised that he would depart with the whole multitude if so be Cipiere would yéeld vnto them his men armour The which being graunted he departed but the people were scarse gone out of sight when Baron de
also in the laste rising as soone as was offered to the sayd prince and other Lords and gentlemen of his company the reestablishment of the exercise of religion notwithstanding their greate troupes and strength of straungers ioyned with them and vpon the very point to assaulte the towne of Chartres in the view and face of the enemyes campe which was for the most disordered if at the onely sounde and pronouncing of peace made by a Trumpet sent vnder the name of your maiestie the sayde prince did not onely forbeare y assault but also raised forthwith his siege and retired his army reping notwithstanding of so readie obedience but a bloudy peace and promise full of infidelitie if also during the same sturre the morrow after the battaile at Sainct Denys where both the prince had the better and the Constable principall leader of the army was slaine The sayde Prince dispatched to your maiestie the Lord de Theliguy aswell to warne you of the ruine and desolation threatning from the instaunt your Realme if the straungers were suffered to enter houering there vpon the frontiers as also to mediate and sollicite in meanes and remedyes to knit an absolute peace only in the cause of religion if in short your Edicts haue bene alwayes published and the peace accorded at suche tymes as they of the religion if they would haue abused the opinion of your purpose might in respect of their forces persuade and beléeue that aswell in all your parleyes and treaties of peace there was no other mention than of the matter of religion as also that their enemyes haue not bene brought to it but by necessitie being vnable by open force to mayntaine any longer against them in what conscience or with what face or countenance may it be sayd that these troubles moue continue for the matter and cause of religion And yit neuerthelesse the more to choke and conuince the Cardinall of Lorraine and other his adherentes of their lies and slaunderous impositions which they publish daily the said Princes Lordes Knightes gentlemen and others of their companies forgetting the infidelitie and all disloyall attemptes heretofore conspired agaynst them declare and protest this daye both before God and your Maiestie that what so euer hath ben don or offered to them in euill from the beginninge to thys houre thei neither haue nor wil once impute it to your Maiestie as knowing your nature to be nothing touched with such iniust seuerities whereof you haue gyuen so many publique experiences that there is nowe no cause of doubte neyther haue or do they thinke to chaunge or diminish in any respect their duetye and naturall regard which they haue alwayes bent to the true aduauncement of your greatnesse and Royall estate wherein and also in so many effectes aforesaid if it bée both knowne and séene that they entertayne no other purpose nor meaning than vnder the obedience and authoritie of your Edictes to serue God according too his will and as they are instructed by his holy woorde with desire to be maintayned with equall care as your other subiectes in their honours liues and goods they are now ready to giue such further manifest proofe and witnesse as their most enemies shall haue least cause henceforth to doubt them And that neither to enter into any iustification of their actions passed as their inn●…cencie and iustice of their cause béeing sufficientlye known to your maiestie and all other Kings princes and potentates what straungers so euer they be if they be not of the faction and partie of Spaine much lesse to séeke to capitulate with your maiestie knowing god be praysed what is the dutie of good and faythfull subiectes to their soueraigne Prince and naturall Lorde But Sir in respect of the large peny worthes and cōmon marchandise which heretofore hath bene made of the faith and word of your maiestie which aboue all ought to be holy sacred inuiolable and withall with what vnséeming boldnesse your authoritie and name hath ben abused to the extréeme peri●… of all your people of the reformed profession it néed not séeme straunge if the said Princes with their consociates doe humbly beséeche you to declare by an Edict solemn perpetual and irreuocable your resolute will in a libertie exercise of their Religion to the ende that by the same suche as heretofore at two seuerall times both rashly and with all impunitie haue infringed and violated your former constitution in that cause may by this thirde be more brideled and restrayned wherein because such as were not able to endure the vnitie and vniuersall rest maintayned amongst your people by the good obseruation of your Edictes haue taken occasion to alter and corrupt them by new constructions and modifications contrary to the true substāce of the same and sincere meaning of your maiestie And that also the sayde Princes with the reste of their faction confesse to haue borne a most iust iudgement of God in more sortes of afflictions in tyme of peace than when it was open ▪ warre as in con senting too easely to the treatises of peace whiche haue ben made the same prouiding a generall contentment on all sides that God should be serued onely in certayn places of the Realme and by certain persons as though in a sound conscience there belonged no other thing to the seruice of God. They most humbly beséeche your maiestie to accord and graunt generally to all your subiectes of what qualitie and condicion so euer frée vse of the sayd Religion in all Cities villages and boroughes all other places and corners of your Realm and countreys within your obedience and protection without any exception reseruacion modification or restraint of persons tymes or places and that with suerties necessary in so hyghe a cause and besides to ordeyne and enioyne to make manifest profession of the one or other religion to the ende to cut of hereafter all meanes and occasions to many who abusing such benefite and grace are flipt into Atheisme and carnall libertie and who standing vpon no exercise and profession of religion desire nothing more than to sée an vniuersall confusion in this Realme and all order pollicie and Ecclesiasticall discipline reuersed and abolished a thing so daungerous as not to be tollerated in any Christian state And because Sir wée doubt not at al that those who hetherunto haue pitched the foundation of their deuises vppon slaunderous reproches impudently published to make vs hatefull euē to such as God be prays●…d be frée from the seruitude tyrannie of Antichrist will not sticke to impose vppon vs an inciui●…e obstinacy rather to defend without reason that we haue once resolued to beléeue touching the Articles of Christian religion than to correct or retract our erroures We declare and protest as herevnto we haue done that if in any pointe of the confession of faith heretofore presented to your maiestie by the reformed Churches of your Realme it may be founde by the word
of God comprehended in the Canonical bookes of the holy scripture that we swarue from the doctrine of the prophets and apostles we will forthwith lend our handes and giue place to such as will instruct vs better in the word of GOD if we erre in any article than we haue bene from the beginning for which cause and the better to effect so happie a purpose we desier nothing more than a conuocation of a counsell frée and generall and lawful ly called wherein as euery one may haue hearing and scope to reduce his reasons at large so the same to be eyther confirmed or conuinced by the only woord of God the true meane vsed in al times of antiquitie vpon like oc●asion By which meane Sir also it is not to be doub ted that God by his speciall grace will not vnseale the eyes of your maiestie and so giue you spéedye and true sight into the hartes and willes of your subiects reconciled and knit with an indissoluble bond your Realme returned into his first estate beawty and dignitie to the shame and confusion of yours and our cōmon enemies who by their subtill and priuie intelligences wyth the house of Spayne haue with sinister pollicyes translated the late storme and tempeste of the lowe Countreys to your Realme and almost thundered it vpon the type of your crowne humbly desiringe your maiesty to enter precise consideration and iudgement whether it be better to expecte of two armies already assembled within your realme a firy and bloudy victory yéeldinge equall frute to the conquerour and he that is ouercome or else to employe them togyther in the seruice of your maiestyes affayres in so many goodly occasions presently offered importing no lesse the rest and aduauncement of your crowne and realme than any that euer happened in your tyme returning also by that meane the storme to the place from whence it came wherin the said princes Lordes Knightes Gentlemen with all the rest of their companyes be vnfaynedly resolued as in all other thynges tendinge to the greatnesse of your Noble estate to employ their liues goods with al other meanes wherewith God had endued them euen to the last drop of their bloud acknowledging in this world no other so ueraintie or principalitie than yours in whose obedyence and subiection they ●…o desire to liue and dye The same being also such and al that a soueraigne and naturall Prince is to exspect or desire of his faithfull louing subiects and seruants This request thus deuised and written the Princes sent a trumpet to the catholikes camp to obtayne passeport for a Gentleman to go to his maiestie which being refused the Admiral found meanes to send a coppie of it to the Marshall Montmorancy to present to the King who about the xix of Iulye following returned a messenger to the Admirall to let him knowe that he had presented the requeste to his maiesty who would not looke on it sayinge he would neyther heare nor sée any thing comming from him afore he had put himselfe in obedience and fauour of his maiestie who then assured him to receiue and embrace him when and as often as he would put himselfe in endeuour To this message by letter the Admirall aunswered the. xxvi of the same moneth that séeinge his maiestye would not receyue the said request he could not otherwyse chuse than leaue the matter to the iudgement of al christian Princes not touched with passion or partial affection whither they vsed not indeuour to come vnder the dutifull obedience of his maiestie or not labouringe for their part by all their possible meanes to quench the manifold calamities houering to ouerwhelme the whole realme and so sette themselues within the fauour and grace of the king But now séeinge that there be some will not spare the vniuersall destruction of the realme onely to rauishe their lyues and erercyse of theyr religion they would looke more neare than afore for the remedy The Kinges brother being at Lohes had aduertisement of the sieege of Luzignan dispatching with all diligence the Duke of Guyse to get within Poictiers as well to hinder the taking of the towne as to turne the siéege from Luzignan notwithstanding he was ther no sooner than the castell was rendered The Duke of Guise arriued at Poytiers with the Mar quise du Meine his brother on Fryday xxii of Iuly entring by the Bridge Anioubert with his companies which were about fiftéene hundreth horsemen amōgst whom were foure hundreth Italians gouerned by the lord Paule Sforce brother to the Counte de Sainct Fiour and one Cornet of Reisters These succoures assured greatly them within the Towne who otherwayes might happely haue trēbled at the comming of the Princes campe There were within Poyctiers afore the Guyses comming the Counte du Lude his thrée brethren de Chastel liers de Sautere and de Briançon the Lordes de Ruffec de la Riuiere Boisequin de Ferraques d' Argence de Rouet other lordes and Knights of the Order and Captaynes of horsemen with part of their companies There were also of footemen the companies of the Captayne 's Passac la-Prade la Vacherie d' Arsac le Lis Bois-vert Boneau Boulande Iarrie with certaine other besides vi companies of footemen raysed by the inhabitants of the town The generall number of Catholike Souldiours of all sortes as well footemen as horsemen straungers as townesmen during this siéege whereof shall be spoken hereafter were v. or vi thousand mē they had vi péeces of Artillerie as two or thrée meanes and certeyn less●… péeces in the Castell The Princes after the rendering of Luzignan and afore they besieged Poyctiers tooke Monstruel Bonyn Bouché Sansay Viuone with other little Castelles about Poyctiers thereby to hold the Catholiques more strayt In which meane while the princes horssemen made ordinarie roades euen to the gates of Poyctiers burninge many Abbayes Priories and Temples The 24. day the said horsemen as wel French as Allemans presented thēselues in battayl before the town on that side which is aboue the Abbay of S. Cyprie●… vntill very néere S. Benoit being deuided into two great hostes Certeyn horsemen of the town issued out at the gate toward the bridge Anioubert with certayn numbers of shot on foote who without any thing dooinge retired into the towne and the horsemen of the Religion into their seuerall quarters The 25. day of the same moneth the Princes foot mē and horsemen presented agayne before the town about noone The footemen gaue a hoat charge vppon the sūburbes de la Cueille where the Capteyne Bois-vert with hsi companie lodged behind a little trench makinge negligent watch were sodenly set vpon and the moste part killed the rest being forced to retyre more lowe to the suburbs S. Ladre were valiantly followed by them of the religion euen to the postes and houses ioyning to the gate of the suburbes There began a hoat skirmish which lasted almost fyue houres vntill the night deuyded them they of the
the slaughter of the Admirall and his adherentes was done by the Kings commaundement for so was his maiesties expresse pleasure bicause they had conspired to kil him and his brethren and the Quéene his mother and the Kyng of Nauarre And farther that the King did forbid that from thenceforthe there should be no moe assemblies holden nor preachings vsed of the Religion After the Kinges oratiō ended Christopher Thuane Presidēt of that Parliamēt a man very notable for his light brain and his cruell heart did with very large wordes congratulate vnto the King that he had now with guile and subtiltie ouercom these his enimies whome he could neuer vanquishe by armes and battell saying that therein the King had most fully veryfied the olde saying of Lewes the eleuenth his progenitor King of Fraunce which was wont to say that he knew neuer a latine sentence but this one Qui nescit dissimulare nescit regnare He that can not skil to dissemble can not skil to be a King. But Pibrace the aduocate of the Fināces made a short oration the summe whereof was to this effecte that although the King hadde iust and great cause to be displeased yet he thought it more agréeable with his maiesties clemencie and goodnesse to make an ende of the slaughters and common spoyle and not to suffer such outrages to be any longer committed without iudiciall procéeding in the cause and besought his maiestie that from thenceforth it would please him to vse the lawe which is well knowne to be the onely stablishment of kingdomes and Empires and that there had bene already giuen to the commonaltie too perillous an example to followe An arrest of Parliamēt with the Kings royall assent being made to that effect there were immediately Haroldes and trumpeters sent roūd about all the towne and an Edict proclaimed in the Kings name that from thenceforth the slaughters and common butcherly murtherings should ceasse and that all persons should abstainc from pillage and robberie This being knowne there were diuers speaches vsed of this matter throughout the town and specially of learned mē The most part sayd that they had read many histories but in all memorie of all ages they neuer heard of any such thing as this They cōpared this case with the horrible doings of King Mithridates which with one messenger and with the aduertisement of one letter caused a hundreth and fiftie thousand Romaines to be slaine Some cōpared it with the doing of Peter of Arragone which slewe eight thousand Frenchmen in Sicile which Isle they had surprised in his absence But yet this difference appeared betwene those cases and this that those Kings had exercised their crueltie vpon foreins and strangers but this King had done his outrage vpon his owne subiectes being yelded not so much to his power as to his faith and credit Those Kings were bound by no promise but such as was giuen to the strangers themselues this King was with newe made league bound to the kings and Princes his neighbors to kepe the peace that he had sworne Those kings vsed no guilefull meanes vnworthie for the maiestie of a King to deceyue this king for a baite and allurement abused the mariage of his owne sister and in a manner besprinkled hir wedding robe with bloud Which dishonor and indignitie no posteritie of all ages can forget Some againe discoursed that though this cruell aduise semed to many Courtiers to haue bene profitable yet not onely the honor of a King but also the estimation and good fame of the whole nation was against that shewe of profit They alleaged how Aristides did openly in the audience of all the people reiect the counsell of Themistocles cōcerning the burning of the Lacedemonians nauie although it must needes haue followed that the power of the Lacedemonians their enimies should therby haue bene vtterly weakened ▪ Fu●… Camillus receyued not the children of the chief Lords of the Phalice betrayed to him by their schoolemaister but stripped him naked and deliuered him to be whipped home with rods by the same children Pausanias hath left it reported that the posteritie of Philip of Macedon fell into most great calamities for this cause that he was wont to set light by the reuerend conscience of an oth and his faith giuen in leagues Some cited the lawe of the twelue tables Si patronus clienti fraudem facit sacer esto If the patrone or soueraigne defraude his client or vassall be he out of protection They disputed also that like faith as the vassal oweth to his Lord the Lord oweth also to his vassall and for what causes and for what fellonies the vassal loseth his tenancie for the same causes and fellonies the Lord loseth his seigniorie Some said that the right hand in auncient time was called the pledge of the faith of a King and that this if a King shall despise there is no communion of right with him and he is no more to be accounted a king neither of his owne subiects nor of straungers Kingly vertues in tymes past haue bene reported to be these iustice gentlenesse and clemencie but crueltie and outrage haue euer bene dispraised both in all persons and specially in princes Scipio hath in all ages bene praysed who was wont to say that he had rather saue one citizen than kill a thousand enimies whiche sentence Antoninus the Emperor surnamed Pius the kinde or vertuous did oft repeate It was a most shamefull byworde of yong Tyberius to be called clay tempered with bloud They sayd also that kings haue power of life and death ouer their subiects but not without hearing the cause and iudicial proccding that there cannot be alleaged a greater authoritie than the Dictators had at Rome in whome was the soueraigne power of peace and warre of life and death and without appeale yet was it not lawfull for them to execute a citizen his cause vnheard Only théeues and murderers take away mens liues without order of lawe and hearing their cause Who can doubt said they but that this so great outrage so great sheading of Christiā bloud is the frute of the curssed life of the courtiers For said they now throughout al Fraunce whoredom loose leudnesse of life are so frée vsual the now the most part of the women of Fraunce séeme to be in manner common and ▪ the wicked blasphemies and continuall execrations and dishonorings of Gods most holye name and maiestie are suche as God can not longer beare And true it is though incredible among forein Nations that the Catholikes of France haue prescribed themselues this for a special mark to be knowne from other men that at euery thirde word they blasphemously sweare by the head death bloud and bellie of God and wonderfull it is that the King himselfe is so muche delighted in this custome of swearing and blaspheming and this as it were a pestilent infection is spred abroade and common among the very plowmē and peysants so as none
the Religion which had anye charge in hand during the troubles MY L. of Gwiche I vnderstand that the. iij. brethren Daggonels and one Porcher the host at the signe of the Aduenture Mossoner Crispine and Captaine Grise which were the principall of the faction in Burgundie and were the cause of the taking and recouering of the Citie of Mascon in the late troubles and of all the decay which happened in that countrey bee kept prisoners in Mascon And bycause I vnderstande they hope to escape out by ransome which I would in no wise should be done I ordeyne and commaūd that you kepe them safe for as much as I hope by their meanes to discouer a great many things which greatly touch the weale of my seruice And if there be any other prisoners of the new religion in Mascon which haue bene factious you shal likewise kepe thē so that they escape not by paying ransome for I would not for any thing in the world that there shuld be taking of rasome among my subiects And thus my L. of Gwich I pray God kepe you in his holy tuitiō VVrittē at Paris the. xiiij of September 1572. Signed Charles and vnde●…neath Brulard THE KINGS LETTERS TO MONSIEVR DE Gordes his Lieutenant generall in Daulphine wherein ●…e sendeth him worde that the best proof of his doings is the accusations and complaintes of them of the Religion against him wherevnto be should haue care to answere MOnsieur de Gordes by your letters of the first of this moneth I perceyued the order which you appointed in your Gouernement since the aduertisement which you had of the execution of the Admirall and his adherentes and since I am sure you forgot nothing which you thought might serue for your assuraunce of those places wherof you had occasion to doubt And to the intent you shoulde haue the more meanes to make your selfe knowne I haue prepared that the souldiers of Corsica which I had appointed to go into Prouince should returne to you and therevpon haue written too my Cousin the Counte of Tende who will not faile to send them vntoo you ●…or as much as there is no neede of them now in that countrey He should also send you word of the tyme of their departing to the ende that you might haue leysure to prouide to receyue them and appoint their places where they should be in garrison I haue seen that which you writ too mee concerning the continuall payment in Daulphine what is due for the last yeare wherevpon I will aduise of the state of my fines the meanes that may be and according thervnto there shall be no fault but they shall be prouided for For the reparation of the Bridge of Grenoble they of the same place must deuise the meanes wherby they should best helpe them ●…elues therein and when they haue aduertised me I will appoint them necessarie prouision Touching the souldiers appointed ●…or the Baron of Adresse bycause the occasion why I appointed them to be leuied now ●…easeth I haue written to him to send them backe and dismisse them againe wherfore there is no neede to make prouision for their main●…enance nor likewise to tell you any thing else concerning the answeres which you haue made too the remembrances which they of the Religion haue presented against you For your doings are well knowne and playne vnto mee and therevpon I will take no better proofe than their accusation VVherfore you shall put your selfe to no more paine on that side Moreouer I haue herewith sent you a copie of the declaration which I made of the Admirals death and his adherents and made to be vnderstoode that it should be obserued and followed and that all murders sackings and violences should cease Neuerthelesse I haue heard complaints of diuerse places that such extraordinary wayes continue which is a thing that doth much displease mee By the meanes whereof I aduise you in doing this charge once againe put vntoo you that you giue order throughout your gouernement to cause all hostilitie force and violence to cease and that the sayd declaration be straightly obserued and kept with punishing those that withstand so rigorously that the demonstration thereof may serue for an example seyng my intent is that they should be punished as behoueth and to marke them which wincke or dissemble therat This present letter shall serue also for an aduise of the receipt of those letters which you wrote the. 5. of this present wherby you send me word that you receyued no message by word of mouth from me but only letters of the. xxij xxiiij and. xxviij of the moneth passed whereof put your selfe to no further pai●…e for that charge was only for such as thē were neere about me which is al that I haue at this tyme to say vnto you Praying herevpon the Creator to kepe you in his holy and worthy tuicion VVritten at Paris the. xiiij day of September Signed Charles and beneath Fizes And aboue To M. de Gordes knight THE KINGS LETTERS TO THE DVKE of Guise his Lieutenant generall in Champaigne and in Prie. COusin although in all my former letters I haue giuen you too vnderstand well inough how much I desire that al my subiects as wel of the nobilitie as others which professe the new Religiō and quietly vse them selues in your gouernement should by you bee maintayned and preserued in all suretie vnder my protection and safegard without giuing them any hinderance by trouble in their persons goods and families yet neuerthelesse I haue beene aduerti●…ed that in certaine places of my Realme there haue bene many sackings and pillings done by such as dwell in the hou●…es of them of the sayd new Religion as well in the fieldes as in the Cities vnder colou●… of the commotion which happened in my Citie of Paris the xxiiij day of August last a thing beyond all measure displeasant and disagreable vnto me and for the which I would haue prouision and remedie VVherfore I pray you Cousin that aboue all things as you desire that I should knowe the good affection you beare to the good weal of my seruice you take that matter next your hart too perserue and maintaine within your gouernment according too that which I haue so playnely told and written too you heretofore that all suche of the newe Religion which behaue them selues quietly take no wrong or violence whether it bee for the preseruation of their goodes or persons no more than too my Catholike subiectes And where any wrong or outrage shal bee offered them against my will as I haue before declared so doe I nowe by these presentes declare I will and intend that you shal make some euident and notorious punishment of such as are herein culpable so that their correction may serue for an example to al other that I may see my self throughly obeyd herein as I would be and my cōmaundements receyued amōgst all my subiects in another sorte than they haue bene heretofore Assuring you
commaundement for those of the newe opini●…n or those which made practises and deuises for them or those which might haue had intelligence of the sayd conspiracie His Maiestie declareth that he meaneth not of things done and past during the troubles which were before the Edict of Pacification in August 1570. and that there shall be no inquisition thereof and none shall bee troubled in goods or person therfore but for that respect they shal inioy the benefit of the Edict of Pacification but that the sayd wordes extend only to those which be found to be giltie or accessarie to the last conspiracie done against his Maiestie and estate and that other which are imprisoned shall be set at libertie And as touching them which will make profession of their faith and returne to the Catholike Religion his Maiestie desireth that his gouernours and officers shall excyte and conforte them as much as they can too that effect and execution of that good will and that their friendes and kinsfolkes should also bee exhorted too doe the like for their parte And if any should hurt them in goods or body his Maiestie willeth readie and speedie execution too bee done on them And too the intent that they maye followe the fourme which hath bene kept in professing the faith which they doe make that returne to the Apostolike and Romishe Church there is sent herewith a memorie thereof From Paris the. xxij day of September 1572. Signed Charles And beneath Pinart THE FOVRME OF ABIVRATION OF HE resie and confession of faith which they which haue swarued from the faith and pretende to be receyued into the church ought to make THIS IS THE ABIVRATION VVHICH they caused al of the Religiō to make in Fraunce to saue their liues Printed at Paris by Nicolas Roffet dwelling in the new streat of our Ladie at the signe of the Mower with the Kings Priuilege FIrst they whiche haue swarued from the fayth and desire too returne intoo the compasse of our holye mother Church ought too present themselues to their Curates or vicars to bee instructed of that which they ought to doe that done they shal bee sent vnto the reuerend Byshop of the dioces or his Chauncellour or officiall too make the sayd Abiuration and confession in maner and former following IN. borne at c. in the dioces of c. and dwelling c. acknowledging by the grace of God the true faith Catholike and Apostolike from the which I haue through my fault gone astray and separated my self since c. and desirous to returne to the flocke of Christes true shepefold which is the Catholike Apostolike and Romish Church confesse to haue abiured and cursed all the errours and heresie of the Lutherians Caluinistes and Hugonotes and all other heresie whatsoeuer wherwith I haue heretofore bene diffamed or touched and I agree to the fayth of our holy mother the Church and desire you in the name of God of his sonne Iesus Christ and of the glorious Virgin his mother Marie and of all the Sainctes of Paradise that it would please you to receyue me into the flocke and shepefold of Gods people which liue vnder the obedience of the Pope ordayned our Sauiour Iesus Christs vicar in the sayd Church submitting my self paciently to abyde and willingly to do the penance which it shal please you to enioyne me for the absolution of my faults committed whilest I was in the foresayd sectes wherof I aske and require pardon of God and of his sayd Church and of you that be appoynted my pastor by God the Creator absolution with such penance as you shal iudge to be holsome for the satisfaction of my sinnes offences And to the intent you should knowe that I haue and do make this abiuration frō my heart I confesse moreouer before God you that I beleeue that which is contayned in the Simbole or Creede of the Apostles and Athanasius and other confessions of saith made approued by the whole councels of the Catholike Apostolike and Romish church that is I beleeue in one only God the father almightie Creator of Heauen and Earth and of all things visible and inuisible and in one L. our Lord Iesus Christ the only sonne ongendred by God the father before the constitucion of the world God of God Light of Light true God of true God engendred not created Consubstantiall with the Father by whom all things were made who for vs mē and for our saluation descended from heauen c. as in the belief of morning prayer I beleeue likewise acknowledge and confesse al that which is contayned in the bookes as well in the olde as of the newe testament approued by the sayd holye and Apostolike church of Rome according to the sense and interpretation of the holy Doctours receyued by the same reiecting al other interpretation as false and erroneous I acknowledge the seuen Sacramentes of the sayde Catholike Apostolike and Romish church that they were instituted by our L. Iesus Christ and that they be necessarie for the saluation of mankind although that al of them are not of necessitie to be conserred too all that is to saye I confesse that the sayde seuen Sacramentes are these Baptisme Confirmation Eucharist ▪ which is the Sacrament of the altar Pen●…nce extreme vnction Order and Mariage and that the sayde Sacraments confer grace and that of them Baptisme Confirmation Order can not be reiterated without sacrilege That the sayde Sacraments haue the effect which the sayde church teacheth and that the forme and vsage wherwith they be ministred too christians is holye and necessarie I acknowledge also that the holye Masse is a sacrifice and oblation of the verye bodie and bloud of our sauiour Iesus Christ vnder the forme of bread and wyne mingled with water whiche substances of bread and wyne vnder the sayde formes are in the Masse by the wordes whiche serue for consecration sayd and pronounced by the Priest transubstanciated and transformed intoo the substance of the sayde bodye and bloud of Iesus christ Notwithstanding that the qualities and accidentes remayne in the sayde formes after the sayde consecration and that the Masse is holesome and profitable as well for the quicke as the deade I acknowledge and confesse the concomitāce that is to say that in receiuing the body of Iesus Christ vnder the forme of bread alone I likewise receiue the blood of Iesus Christ. I confesse that Prayer and interc●…ssion of Sainctes for the quicke and the dead is holie good and he●…thfull for Christians and is not contrarye for any respect to the glorie of god That prayers made in the Churche for the faythfull which are dead do profit them for the remission of their sinnes and lessening of their paines incurred for the same That there is a Purgatorie where the soules abyding are succoured by the prayers of the faythfull I confesse that we muste honor and call vpon the sainctes which raigne with Iesus Christ and that they make intercession for