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A17121 An historicall narration of the iudgement of some most learned and godly English bishops, holy martyrs, and others (whereof III; viz. Archbishop Cranmer, B. Latimer, and Bishop Hooper, suffred martyrdome, in the dayes of Q. Mary, for the truth and Gospell of Christ Iesus) concerning Gods election, and the merit of Christ his death, &c. J. A., of Ailward.; Ailward, John, attributed name. aut; Andrewes, John, fl. 1615, attributed name. aut 1631 (1631) STC 4; ESTC S100399 62,871 120

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AN HISTORICALL NARRATION OF THE IVDGEMENT OF some most Learned and Godly English Bishops Holy Martyrs and Others Whereof III viz. Archbishop CRANMER B. LATIMER and Bishop HOOPER Suffred Martyrdome in the Dayes of Q. MARY for the Truth and Gospell of CHRIST IESVS Concerning GODS Election and the Merit of CHRIST his Death c. LONDON Printed by B. A. and T. F for Samuel Nealand and are to be sold at his shop at the Signe of the Crowne in Duck. Lane 1631. Archbishop CRANMER his Booke of the Sacrament of CHRIST his Body and Blood against STEPHEN GARDINER B. of Winchester was written by that most Reverend Father Anno 1551. in the Raigne of K. EDVVARD the 6. And Reprinted by Iohn Day Anno 1580. Cum Privilegio B. HOOPER his Booke upon the Commandements together with the Preface which is heere presented was Written by him An. 1549. Novemb. 5. and Printed first in the said Kings raigne Anno 1550. And afterwards reprinted by Robert Walgrave in Queene Elizabeths Time but the yeare is not specified B. LATIMER is Printed by Divers and at divers Times and is in every mans hands But the Copie here-alledged is that which was Printed by Iohn Day Anno 1571. TO THE IMPARTIALL Christian Reader Whether He bee Laick or Ecclesiastick Grace Mercy Truth and Peace bee Multiplyed Deare CHRISTIAN ALbeit I am no Professed Scholler nor am able to brangle Sophistically about the niceties of Schoole-Quod-libets yet by the Blessing of GOD and Tender care of my Parents I have beene trayned up to such a little Measure of Learning as hath enabled mee though not to conceive the STRONG LINES of these Times yet to understand Plaine English And some Easie-latine Authors Wherefore when I can steale any Vacancie from mine Ordinary Imployments I doe betake my selfe to converse with such Bookes as speake to my Simple capacity in a Stile Intelligible And happening by Chance upon a Booke written some Fourescore yeares agone by an excellently-learned Byshop and a most holy Martyr Iohn Hooper upon the Ten Commandements I perused it with Diligence and received no small comfort to my Soule and instruction to my understanding by It Especially by the Perface In which to my simple Iudgement The Author discourseth very learnedly and conscionably about the Points of Gods Election and the Merit of our Blessed Saviour Iesus Christ-his Death and Passion I had also read in the Booke of English Martyrs That the great learned and Holy Arch-Byshop Doctor Cranmer and Byshop Latimer and Byshop Hooper did All of them suffer Martyrdome and shed their dearest Hearts bloud in the blacke dayes of Persecution under Queene Marie for the Truth and Gospell of Christ Iesus And that None of Them could iustly bee Charged or Branded with any Hereticall or damnably-Erroneous Doctrine More-over I was informed That All of Them were worthy Instruments of God in the First Reformation of Religion from Popish Errours and Superstition in the Raigne of King Edward the sixt of ever-Blessed Memory And that Some of them were imployed in the Making and Ordering of our Booke of Common-Prayer as it was THEN set out and in Composing the Confession of the Church of England in the Booke of Articles of Religion That These were Persons as cleare and Free from all Taint of Poperie Pelagianisme Superstition or Heresie as Any that lived in Those Times or Since I thinke the Booke of Acts and Monuments will fully perswade any honest man that shall There reade their Stories without preiudice Besides Though I will not take upon Me to give you the Sence and Meaning of the Confession of our owne Church yet This wee may say without offence to Any That such learned Men and Holy Bishops as were Principall Agents inframing the Confession and Doctrine thereof in the Booke of Articles and in the Booke of Common Prayer did well and throughly understand and know the True-sense and meaning of their owne Conclusions and neither did nor would eyther write or preach any thing against or Contrarie to the Same Neither is it possible or any wayes probable that These Holy Martyrs and learned Bishops who sacrific'd their lives for the Gospell of Iesus Christ Almost fourescore yeares agone should derive and borrow Their Tenents touching these matters from Iames Harmin or the Remonstrants in Leyden Considering These did first begin publikely to write of such Things not much above Twenty yeares since Wherefore It seemes to me that it is against Reason that very Many Conscientious learned Divines amongst us which doe now teach the selfe-same Doctrine that was long agone delivered by These Holy Mirtyrs and Fathers of our Church should be uncharitably Falsely and Ignominiously Branded with Odious and Abhorred Nick-names fetcht from Leyden Whereas in Truth I know They disdaine to become Sectatours ' to Any Sectaries of any Countrey But Contrariwise doe strive to preserve the Purity of the same Doctrine which They received from the First Fathers of the Reformation in England and neede not to straggle beyond the Seas into Belgia to learne Instructions from thence For which Cause I thought I should doe God and my Holy Mother the Church of England no Evill seruice in giving Notice to the world of what These Holy Fathers and Martyrs did hold and Teach touching these Matters of Gods Election and the Merit of our Blessed Saviours Death in a meere Narrative and historicall way which onely will stand with my profession not in any Argument or so much as in a Bare-word Interposing or Engaging my selfe For my End and scope is not at all to Debate or Determine such points to Meddle with the sacred Doctrine of the Church to wrest the sense or Meaning of the Articles or indeed any way to State the Trueth on eyther side For this would not sute with my poore Abilities But mine Earnest Endeavour and desire is for Peace and quietnesse sake among Those of our owne whose Consecrated Mouthes especially in consecrated places cannot without Sacriledge bee imployed by the Houre in ray lings and evill speakings to give such as are willing to reade it onely a sight and view what Propositions concerning These matters Opinions or Doctrines call them what you will were agitated and Maintained by Many ancient Fathers of our Church and Principall Authors in our Reformation who were all Dead before Leyden was so much as an Vniversity and concerning whom no member of any Reformed Church in Christendome can make any scruple but that they might bee saved To the Intent that if such Positions as we Here shall find were by them tollerated and Approved in those Times by One or other without Breach of Charity or Bandying of Nick-names We also in these Times notwithstanding the like private Differences in unnecessary Controversies may as They herctofore did beare with one Another and unanimously orderly and silently submit our Pennes and Tongues unto Gods sacred and our Dread Soveraignes Royall and Christian Ordinance in this Church which onely bids us to
part Exod. 19 3. c For whom the Law was made and given Gen. 3. Gen. 6 6. Math. 25 24. Deut. 9 5. 7 8. Onely Mercy provoked God to the covenant Deut. 9 6. Gen. 3 15. 12. 3. 15 5. 1● 4. The Death of Christ the meanes Heb. 9 28. Heb. 7. 1. Apoc. 13 8. Gen. 3 ●0 All the prom 〈…〉 se● made in and for Christ Iohn 10. 9. Iohn 14. 6. Iohn 1. 12. 3. 16. c. 6. 32. c. Esa 53. 4. 5. Iohn 1 29. Iohn 14 30. Rom 5 17 18. Gen 3 15. Gen. 15. 4 5. 17. 1. Galat. 3 28. Colos 3 11. Rom. 5 15. 2 Pet. 2 1. 3. Malac. 1. 2. 3. Rom. 9 13. See B. Iati 〈…〉 part 2. fol. ●2 Christ shed as much blood for Iudas as for Peter c. Ionas 1 2. Gen. 25. 23. Mal. 1. 2 3. Gen. 25. 23. 27 28 29. Rom. 9 11 c. Rom. 11. 32. Galat. 3 22 Mark 16 16. Math. 11. 28. Rom. 11. 32. 1. Tim. 2. 4. How Faith b●ing unperfect is accepted of God Rom. 11. 32. Galat. 3 20. Esa 53. 4 5. Iohn 1. 29. Rom. 5 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Vid. Melanet 2. part Operum pag. 268. Quanto magis Pater vester dabit sp Sanctum petentibus cum Non ait Cantemnentibus How wee are called the enemies of God Rom 8 7. Rom. 5 8. How wee are excluded from the promise of Grace that is extended to all Christ received our infirmities but not the contempt of the Law and of God The cause of Damnation in man Psal 5 4. Ose 1 3 9. The cause of mans Election Rom. 9 16. Ephes 1 5. Rom. 8 29. Rom. 8 15. 15 16. What declareth a lively Faith Iohn 6. 44. How God draweth unto Christ a Nec tamen habeut se Mens voluntas vt statua ideo diuerūt ●eteres Praecedente gratia comitante voluntate bona opera fieri Melau●th part 2. Operū p. 268. pag. 248. b In illo loco Ieannis decitur Omnis qui aud●t a Patre et discit veniet ad me Discere iubet id est Audire vocem Doctrinae traditaem a● ipso assentiri non indulgere di●●edentia Melan●●h ibid. Exod. 14. 1. Sa 〈…〉 18. 11. See B Latimer part 2. fol. 54. Math. 12 32. Mark 3 29. Luk. 12 10. 1. Iohn 5 16. Heb. 10 26. Gen. 3 45. D. F. Handum pag 214. a Sinnes of Infirmity are committed against the Power of the Father Sinnes of Ignorance against the Wisdome of the Soun● Sins of Malice against the goodnesse and grace of the Holy Ghost 1. Sam. 15 15. Iohn 8. 26. Psal 145. 17. The iustice of God intendeth it selfe to two divers ends Ionas 2. Mat. 25. 31 c. 1. Cor. 11. 32. The fourth impediment Deut. 19. 29. Deut. 30 19. Deut. 29. 4. Deut. 30. 19. Deut. 29. 27. Ezech. 33. 1. Cor. 11 Psalm 119. Reuel 3. Esay 26. Hebr. 12. Deut. 30. 1. 2 Iohn 15. Cic. lib Epist 16. a First they of the Church of Rome b Meaning the Popes of Rome Deut. 30 1● Enthusiasts Luk. 16 29. Rom. 1. 21. Rom. 2 15. a Nemo adeo ferus est vt non mitoscere possit Simodo c. b Hoc est nes●ire sine Christlo plurimas●ir● Curious interpretations of Scriptures are wicked and odious Enter not into the inscrutable Mysteries of God Enter into Christ and there seeke thy Salvation Christ is the Booke of Life wherein our Names be written if we bele●ve in him Iohn 6. Iohn 1 3. How you shall know when you are in the Booke of life Psal 19. Rom 10 18. 1 Tim. 2 4. God would that All should be saved Our stubbornnesse and lacke of Faith is the Cause of our Damnation A right Doctrine to try our Election Iob 34. Ioh. 3 10. Christ is the Booke of Life The unbeleevers are not in the booke of Life The right way how thou maist be assured of everlasting life Idem Part. 3. sol 207. In his Sermon on the First Sunday after Epiphani● 1 Tim. 2. 5. We ourselves are causes of our owne damtion I'●m Part. 3. fol. 198. In his Sermon on the third Sunday after Epiphanic Act. 13 48. A lewd opinion of Predesti nation 1 Tim. 2. We our selves procure our owne Damnation Christ the Booke of Life How we may know when we are in the state of Salvation and when Not. Three markes whereby wee may know whether we be in the booke of Life or no. The first The second The third An evident and plaine Doctrine that sheweth you when you are out of the ●●●or of God Idem Part. 3. fol. 183. In his Sermon on the first Sunday after Epiphani● The terme Saviour is used in sundry common speeches Iesus Christ is our onely Saviour How many wayes Christ saveth us Christs Death is onely our Salvation Si is the onely cause of Dam How wee be saved from Sinne. Christ onely is ●oyd of sinne The Power and Force of Sinne is taken away by Christ Idem Part. 2. fol. 64. In his First Sermon preached in Lincolushire Anno 1553. upon These words The Kingdome of Heaven is like unto a certaine King Math. 22. There is a Sin against the Holy Ghost So long as men are alive wee cannot Iudge whether they have committed the Sinne against the Holy Ghost or not Christ knew the hearts of the Pharisees and therefore iudged of them Christs promises are generall to All Mankind Ioh. 6 47. Rom. 5 20. 15 v. Mat. ●● 28. Idem Part. 2. fol. 92. In his fourth Sermon preached in Lincolnshire upon Philipp 3. Iudas lacked beleefe and therefore was not saved Idem Part 2. fol. 132. In his eight Sermon in Line upon Luke 21 25. Erunt Signa Iohn 3. V●● In the destruction of Ierusalem c. Bzech 33 11. The Cause why God sware The reward of the Obstinate and sti●uecked People Idem Pag. 114. In a Sermon preached on Rom. 13. 11. Idem lib. 51. pag. 372. A plaine declaration of the Sacrifice of CHRIST B. Iewel De●eus Apolog. Cap. 19. Devis 1. 〈◊〉 Oenus 〈◊〉 Mankind that is All that haue the Nature and Kind of Man in them all that are 〈…〉 ted of Men.