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

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King and Counsell the fast keept at Edinburgh at the feasting of the French Ambassadors generall fasts indicted through the realm without the Ks knowledge the usurping of ecclesiasticall jurisdiction by a number of Ministers gentlemen the alteration of the lawes at their pleasure c. And for satisfying good people strangers al 's well as subiects concerning his Ma s good affection towards religion certain articles were penned and subjoined to that Declaration to make it appeare that his Majesty intended nothing but to have a setled policy established in the Church But these things gave not much satisfaction and were replied-unto in pamphlets which dayly came forth against the Court and rulers of it ............ All this summer troubles continued the Ministers being dayly called before the Counsell and a great business made of their subscription to certain articles concerning their obedience unto the Bishops they who refuse had their stipends sequestrat which caused a great out-crying among the people and made the rebells to be the more favored The King to rid himselfe of these vexations did call the principall Ministers and having shewd that all his desire was to have the Church peaceably governed he willed them to set down their reasons in writing why they refuse subscription that he may consider them and satisfy their doubts They chuse rather to propound the same by word and after some conference were induced to subscribe the Articles this cause being added agreeing with the word of God So far there This clause gave occasion of contention for the Ministers did declare tha● they would be obedient unto the things that were commanded unto them according to the word of God and in this sense they would obey the Kings command But the adverse party took and expound ir as an acknowledgement that episcopall Jurisdiction was according to the word of God because it was said They submitted themselves unto episcopall jurisdiction in such things according to the word of God The causes of deposition of Ministers not having vote in Parliament were published in the Kings name among these was one the acceptation of the place of Judicature in whatsoever Civill or criminall causes as being of the number of the Colledge of Justice Commissary Advocate Court-clerke Notary the making of testaments only excepted And for not subscribing the band and obligation devised by act of Parliament for dutifull submission fidelity to our Soverain Lord and shew their obedience to their ordinary Bishop or Commissionare appointed by his Majesty to have the exercise of the spirituall jurisdiction in their diocy So the power of jurisdiction was proper unto the King and the exercise thereof was committed by him unto whom hee would as I have seen his Patent committing unto John Erskin of Dun who is there called our wel beloved Clerk and our Commissioner in ecclesiasticall causes that exercise within the diocy of Brechin Providing that his authority in any grave matter be limited and circumscribed to the counsell of thretteen of the most antient wise and godly pastors of the said diocy to be elected forth of the wholl Synodall assembly and allowed by Us with answer of our Privy Counsell or the most part of them And to make cleare the estate of the Church at that time I adde the substance of an epistle written then by Andrew melvin unto Divines abroad and is to be found in Vindicat. Philadelph pag. 54. It hath pleased the Lord so to blesse the endeavoures of his servants that they have undertaken according to what is prescribed in his word and to increase the Churches of Scotland with so great and so incredible felicity heretofore of his singulare bountifulness But alas when wee do not answere unto so great and rare grace bountifulness of God toward us with such thankfulness of hearts and performance of duties as became us behold through a marvellous yet just judgement of God Satan hath so blinded with ambition and avarice one thogh not of us yet a Minister of the word among us that forgetting as one saith decorisque sui sociûmque salutis he continueth uncessantly to confound heaven and earth and to disturb all things for when he had deserted his flock and without knowledge of the Church had creept into Court when he had not only in a most wicked manner entred into that false episcopacy rising again out of hell against which he had before foughten evermore but also had taken that dominion which he had in a Sermon and before a frequent Assembly after abjured and by his subscription at severall cimes had renounced when he had adioyned himselfe unto the sworn enemies of the Church and religion in a base slavishness and most vile cause when in doubtfull things and desparing of his health he had not only advised with witches and with tears begged their help ...... And also had plotted with the Machiavilian Courtiers and the Pop's emissaries against the life of a very godly and religious man for all which causes he feared rhe censures of the Church to be discharged from the Office of preaching he obtaines from his Royall Majesty a free Ambassage to go into other countries under color of seeking health but as experience teaches to vexe the Church ...... And so at London he carrying himself as an Amssassador had frequent consultations with the Ambassadors of France Spain and with the Bishops there for he abode there and intended not to go further he traduced the best subjects as seditious traitors and was altogether taken up with counsells by which the most learned and faithfullest preachers in both the Kingdoms are compelled now to be altogether silent and leave the Ministery or to provide themselves by flying exile or to suffer the inconveniencies of prison or against Duty conscience subscribe unto the ambitious tyranny of Bishops and the impiety of many rites From him came these Archiepiscopall Letters unto you and the brethren of Zurick wherein by his cunning craft of faining and dissembling he chargeth us with false crimes and accuseth the discipline of our Churches with many calumnies albeit he know very well and our conscience beare us witnes that it was our wholl care to ground our discipline upon the word of God so far as wee could Wee assure you that that good order of the Church which Adamson did first craftily undermine then openly impugne and at last revile as Papall tyranny as the mother of confusion and the cause of sedition was from the beginning of abolishing popery sought by our church out of the word of God and thereafter was allowed by the suffrages of the wholl Church and by degrees brought at last as we were able unto some measure of perfection by the blessing of God and three years since was approved sealed and confirmed with profession of mouth subscription of hand and religion of oath by the King and every subject of every Estate particularly ............ He hath persuaded the Kings Majesty and these
Presbyteries were ever aimed at and in some parts begun but this winter following with consent of the King and by his commission they were constitute through all the realm as followes in the next assembly 3. Wee have heard a complaint here of many Apostates come into the country and namely in the end is mention of Nicolburn he was a professor of Philosophy in S. Leonards Colledge and became a Papist At that time were found some dispensations sent from Rome permitting Papists to promise swear and subscribe and do what other thing might be required of them so that in mind they continue firm and vse diligence to advance privily the Roman faith These dispensations were shewd unto the King for remedy at first he gives order unto one of his Ministers John Craig to writ a form of abiuration of Papistry In obedience John Craig writes a Confession relative unto the former Confession which was wholly positive and abjuring all the corruptions of Rome both in doctrin and superstitious rites and wholl hierarchy together with a promise to continue in the obedience of the doctrin disciplin of this Church and to defend the same to our vocation and power all the dayes of our lifes under the paines contained in the law and danger both of body and soule And he addeth and seing many are stirred up by Satan and that Roman Antichrist to promise swear subscribe and for a time use the holy sacraments in the Church deceitfully against their own consciences minding thereby first under the externall cloak of religion to corrupt and subvert secretly Gods true religion within the church and afterward when time may serve to become open enemies and persecutors of the same under vain hope of the Popes dispensation devised against the word of God to his greater confusion and their double condemnation in the day of the Lord Jesus Wee therefore wil●ng to take away all suspicion of hypocrisy and such double dealing with God his Church protest and call the Searcher of all hearts to witness that our minds hearts do fully agree with this our Confession promise and subscription so that we are not moved for any worldly respect c. These words were added for the better tryall of Papists and the sincerity of professors This Confession was subscribed by the King his houshold January 28. 1580. or according to the r●ckoning of other Countries 1581. and a charge was given by the King March 2. and it was proclamed commanding Commissioners and Ministers to urge their parishoners to subscribe this Confession and to delate the Refusers unto the Ministers of the kings house that the K. and Counsell may take order with them and more of it followes In the mean time to-wit December 31 the Earle of Morton was challenged Januar. 18. he he was imprisoned at Dunbarton Juny 1. he was arraigned and condemned for that he knew the plot against the kings father and did not reveel it and the next day beheaded A rare exemple of humane frailty he who lately was Governor of the realm and in the preceding year wa● the object of the great Ones envy was brought so unexpectedly to such a death Before his execution he remembred what John Knox had said unto him and called him a true Prophet XVIII The Assembly conveens at Glasgow Aprile 24. year 1581. where 1580. The 40. Assembly was Will. Cuningham of Caprintoun commssioner from the king Commissioners from Synods c. Robert pont is chosen Moderator 1. Forsomuch as for purgation of the Ministry from unworthy persons in that function Order was taken in the last Assembly that all men whither Ministers or others should give up the names of scandalous Ministers as they will answer unto God yet by shortness of time no great effect followed Therefore as before the Assembly requires all men as they tender the glory of God and the wee ll of his Church that they delate and give up the names of such persons in writ tomorrow after noon c. The Originall Register wanteth the third and fourth Sessions 2. Whereas in the Assembly at Dundy in the Act against Bishops some difficulty appeared unto some brethren by the word Office what is meant by it The Assembly present consisting for the most part of them who were present and voiced in that Assemb to resolve men of the true meaning of that act Declares that they meaned wholly to condemn the estate of bishops as they are now or lately were in Scotland and the same was the determination of the Church at that time 3. The Kings Commissioner delivereth the Kings Letter together with certain rolls containing a form of planting particular churches and the number and names of the presbyteries with the names of churches within every Presbytery The Assembly appointes certain persons within severall Provinces to conveen tomorrow at sixe a clok in the morning to sicht these rolls and report c. 4. The Assembly having received from the King some demandes propounded in writ with the answers unto the Articles that were presented unto his Ma. by the Church and a Copy of a Letter to be directed unto Barons and Ministers for union and division of Churches with the names of the persons that were appointed to travell in that work And thereby understanding the godly and zealous mynde of his Ma. did praise God heartily the He had moved the Kings heart to have a care of his Church An● first entring into consideration of the Answers thought good to insist with the King and Counsell in these articles 1. That it would please his Ma. to appoint a Judge in Edinburgh to cognosce and judge of injuries don to Ministers in execution of their Office and to punish according to the quality of the crimes and appoint a Proctor for the Ministers injured 2. That an act of Parliament may be made concerning the deprivation of scandalous Ministers and the causes of deprivation to be expressed in the act 3. That the Benefices vaking may be disponed unto the Ministers where the Benefice vakes if they be able as it was agreed in the Conference at Sterlin Followes the tenor of the Kings propositions given by his Commssioner with this inscription Instructions to our trusty and welbeloved Willam Cuningham of Caprintoun directed by Us with advice of the Lords of the Secret Counsell Unto the Assembly of the Ministers of the Church conveened at Glasgow Aprile 20. 1581. You shall deliver Our Letter unto them and let them understand that such of their number as travelled with Us having desired Our answer unto their Articles sent from the Assembly in Dundy in July last Wee caused some of Our Counsell conferr with them at severall times in Octobe● last as also lately which all find the matter concerning the thirds of the Benefices mentioned in the first of these Articles as there required not to be the readiest means either to make the Ministers assured of their stipends or to make Us any reasonable
or in name of any of the Brethren 3. Because Mr Craig is old he craves that shey would give in liete five or sixe Ministers out of which he may chuse two to serve his house 4. Seing the standing of religion and the welfare of his Ma s person are so inseparably joyned that whosoever are enemies to the one are common enemies to both therefore let some be appointed in every Presbytery to advertise inform him diligenly for the more speedy remedy not only of whatsoever practises they can hear of Papists and the Spanish faction but of their receipters and of the practises of Bothwell whose wholl courses as they are directly against his person so they tend wholly to the subversion of religion With directjon also unto them to inform all the Barons and honest men tenderers of his Ma s wee fair to atrend and give inteligence of these practises as they can learn from time to time 5. That where is any port or landing place some brethren be specially appoinred to deal so with the Burghs that they take sufficient tryall according to the law made of all who shall come into or passe forth of this eountrey from whence they came whither they intend what is their purpose and so after good and sufficient tryall if there be any thing of weight importance that they fail not to acquaint his Majesty there with to the end he may the more readily discover all forrein or intestiue practises which are or shall be plotted against the estate of the present religion And this he craves to be done so faithfully as he hath good opinion of their earnest affection no less to the preserving of his person as to the defence of the common cause As also he promiseth to aid and assist you in all your good resolutions that may tend to the furtherance of peace and quietness with the advancement of true religion presently professed within this realm The humble answers of the assembly 1. Unto the first it is agreed according to the Act of Parliament which was delivered with the Articles 2. It is ordained by the wholl Church that no Minister utter from pulpit any rash or unreverent speaches against his Majesty or Counsell or their proceedings but that all their publick admonitions proceed upon just necessary causes sufficient warrant in all fear love and reverence Under the pain of deposing those that do in the contrary from the function of the Ministry 3. The Commissioners that are directed unto his Majesty shall nominate the Brethren and whom he shall chuse shall be admitted by the presbytery where his Majesty makes residence for the time The 4 5. are condescended unto and order taken as the Commissioners will give particular information V. No Colledge shali make disposition of their rents or livings by tack or any other title without the advice consent of the Generall assembly Vnder the pain of deposition of the persons disponing VI. For furtherance of the residence of Ministers it is appointed that all parishes shall build manses where are none or where they be ruinous upon their own expences or if they refuse after they are duly required not only shall they be judged the only cause of the Ministers not residence but it shall be lawfull unto the Minister his aires exequitors or assignayes departing to retain the possession of the Manse built by him if he build or repair the same upon his own expences ay and whill the Intrant Minister refound unto him or his foresaids the wholl expences at least so much as the Parish can not be moved to refound And that the presbytery at the Intrants admission take order for performing this providing that the expences exceed not 400. marks And the presbytery after the repairing or bigging of the Manse shall take exact tryall and account of the expences and give him their allowance to be registred in their books And likewise the Minister succeeding shall have ●he like title to crave of the Intrant after him the like expences ay untill the Parish shall outquite the Manse VII Commissioners are appointed to attend the Parliament with the petitions of the Assembly VIII As the books of Presbyteries are tryed in rhe Provinciall assemblies so the books of the Synods should be brought unto every Generall assembly for the better understanding of their proceedings Under the pain of the censure of the Church IX For remedying controversies among Ministers it is concluded that where any plea thogh in a civill matter ariseth betwixt two brethren if they be both of one presbytery they shall chuse what number they please thereof and the elected shall chuse an overman and they shall summarly decide and give Sentence which shall be irrevocable or without appellation And if they be of sundry presbyterics they shall chuse equall number out of them both and the elected shall elect an Overman and these shall give Sentence as said is without appellation And if any shall refuse this form submission he shall be held by the Church to be contumatio●s X. The Generall assembly by the authority given by God unto them dischargeth all and every Christian within the Church of Scotland from reparing to any of the King of Spain his dominions where the tyranny of Inquisition is used for merchandice negotiation or exercing of sea-faring occupation Untill the Kings Majesty by advice of Counsell have fought and obtained speciall liberty from that King for all his subje s to negotiat there without danger for the cause of religion Under the pain of incurring the censures of the Church untill the last Sentenee of excommunication The reader may judge of the fyve articles and the answers B. Spotswood saith the first two articles were savouring of discontent but he gives not a reason and he saith the King esteeming the second answer to be no restraint but rather to Minister an excuse to the unruly sort when they transgressed rejected it as not satisfying his demand whereupon the petitions of the Church against the Papists at the same time and against the erections of tyths into temporalities were not regarded And the merchants saith he offending at the Act made concerning them did petition his Majesty and Counsell for mantaining their liberty which was granted and nevertheless the Church proceeded in their censures till the merchants promised to surcease their trade with Spain how soon their accounts were made and they be payd of their debitors in these parts As for Bothwell he had fled into England when his treasonous attemps were discovered and when the English Ambassador did interceed for him the King said His offenses were unpardonable and to be abhorred of all Christian Princes In Juny he returned privily into Scotland and found rhe means to surprise the King within Halirud house and caused him subscribe articles which the King afterward did revoke in a Convention of the Estares as dis-honorable and made offer to grant the same upon a new
is most properly a Pastor he that hath not received imposition of hands and hath received from Christ pastorall gifts and a call from a flock obeyth the call in feeding that flock conscienciously Or he that hath received imposition of hands and hath the charge of 100 or 200 flocks and they never seek him nor see him but he waites upon other affaires not belonging to a pastorall charge I grant in the Court of Rome and in the judgement of Satan a ceremony is better then substance But the question is Which of the two is the truest Pastor in the ballance of the Sanctuary Can any consciencious man think as the Court of Rome judgeth Another motive may be thought that since that Writer was guilty of perjury for many times had he subscribed that Confession abjuring Hierarchy and yet took a Prelacy one after another he could not speak nor write a good word of that disciplin into which he had sworn so oft nor of the maintainers of it but with some spight as appeares throgh all his booke which he calleth The History of the Church of Scotland but may rather be called The calumnies and railings against the Church of Scotland whereof he was an enemy and by which he was justly and solemly excommunicated in the year 1638. What is in that book of the faith doctrine or piety of the Church Many of these calumnies in this posthum book he had written before in a Reply ad Epist Philadelphi and it was told him in the Vindiciae that he had written against his conscience It is said Pag. 50. Why should one believe a man who makes not conscience of his words And Pag. 56. Whatsoever may have the shew of a reproach this ingrateson scrapeth together to spue it out against his Mother the Church In which words envy which appeares throughout vented it self wholly for what can be said or forged in a Narration more wickedly than to be silent in that which is good and to proclame what is evill or which may make a shew of evill And Pag. 67. Should not a Bishop whe though he were a Papist yet should at least have the shaddow of gravity be ashamed to fain like a brawling wife what all men know to be false And because in that pamphlet he had written as he doeth oft in this later book that the King applied himself contrary to his mind unto the will of the Ministers it was told him Pag. 59. What can be spoken more vilely and unworthily against the Royall honor then that he applied his will unto the wicked endeavours of his subjects and loosed the raines unto the boldnesse and crimes of wicked men But this is the imprudence by the just judgement of God of flatterers that when they wold most earnestly catch they do most offend So that in a word whosoever regardeth the honorable memory of K. James VI. or the credite of the Church of Scotland will not believe that book of lies and calumnies I return unto that Assembly I. The first three Sessions were taken up with the election of a Moderator and Clerk and one ordinance that Acts of every Assembly should be formed by certain brethren and be publickly read before the dissolving of the Assembly and be in-booked II. The 4. and 5. Sessions have some particulare references III. In Sess 6. The Commissioners that were appointed to deall with the excommunicat Earles report their diligence severally and that they submitt themselves unto the Church in all the prescribed articles The Assembly ordaines the same Commissioners to see the performance of their promises in all the articles so far as possibly can be performed for the time and after performance to absolve them from ●he Sentence of excommunication and to receive them into the bosom of the Church IV. In Sess 7. Notes in form of declaration of certain of the Acts of the G. Ass holden at Perth in Febr. last for explaining his Ms and the Assemblie's meaning for the satisfaction of them which were not acquainted therewith and which are ordained to be registred in the Acts of this present assemb 1. Concerning the lawfulness of the said Ass holden at Perth it 's declared that one of the reasons moving the brethren to acknowledge the lawfulnes of that Ass is found to have been that the Commissioners of the Church had accorded with his Maj. therein as is expressely set down in his Maj. Letters 2. The reason moving the Ass to grant the more willingly to the second article concerning the reproving his Maj. lawes was that his Maj s earnest constant affection to the religion and obedience to the word was evidently known unto the said Ass and that it was his Ms declared will intention alwayes to frame his lawes wholl Government according to the same for this cause the Ass agreeth to the said article 3. Concerning the article ordaining no mans name to be expressed in pulpit excepting notorious crimes c. the point of notoriety is further defined If the crime be so manifest and known to the world ut nulla tergiversatione celari possit 4. Concerning the Article ordaining that no convention of Pastors bee without his Ma. consent c. His Ma s consent is declared to be extended to all and whatsoever form of G. Ass or speciall permitted authorized by his law and as they have warrant in the word of God As being the most authentick form of consent that any King can give 5. Concerning the article of providing Pastors to Burghs It is declared that the reason thereof was is that his Majesty was content and promised that where the Gen. assembly findeth it necessa●y to place any person or persons in any of the saids townes his Majesty and the flock shall either give their consent thereunto or a sufficient reason of the refusall To be propounded either unto the wholl Assembly or to a competent number of the commissioners thereof as his Majesty shall think expedient V. Answers to the rest of his Maj s questions as they were propounded by his Majesty and his Commissioners in the present assembly 1. Concerning the propositions craving that before the conclusion of any weighty matters ●oncerning the estate of his Hieness or of his subjects his Ma s advice approbation be craved thereunto that the same being approved by his Ma. may have the better execution and if need require be authorized by law the assembly craves most humbly that his Ma. either by himselfe or his Commissioners in matters concerning his estate or the wholl estate of his subjects and others of great weight importance that have not been treared before would give his advice and approbation thereunto before any conclusion of the same And for the better obedience to be given to the like statutes in all time coming that his Majesty would ratify the same either by Act of Parliament or Secret Counsell as shall be thought needfull The which his Majesty promiseth to
most gracious Lords There he calleth himself the unworthy servant of his Godliness and he shews the iniquity of an Imperial Ordinance in his judgement and he concludes thus I being obedient unto your command have caused the same law to be published through divers parts of the land and because the law is not consonant unto the Almighty God behold I have told it unto our most gracious Lords by the page of our suggestion therefore in both I have payed what I should who have given unto the Emperour obedience and have not been silent for God so far as I know The Jesuit saith that he did write in such manner partly in humility and partly in necessity because the Emperour had then the Temporal Authority in Rome and the Pope had need to be defended from the Lombards and the Emperour being far off did entrust him with many things and the Bishop ought to give account of such things But the foresaid Ordinance was of a purpose Ecclesiastical And lib. 4. c. 34. he complains that Maximus was admitted Bishop of Salona without consent of him or his Nuntio and nevertheless when he had received from the Emperour a command he had loosed his sentence of Excommunication as if Maximus had been ordeined by his order And li. 9. Ep. 41. he saith if John Bishop of Justiniana will not dismiss his charge the most godly Emperour may cause to choose another seeing what he commandeth to do is in his power as he knows so may he provide only he craves that the Emperour would not cause him to meddle with such a Deposition Here I do not intend to inquire the causes and equity of things but to shew what was done and we see the Pope subject unto the Emperour but wait a space and we shall see the Emperour subject unto the Pope Is not this a novation Acts of a Patriarch Behold what power the Bishops of Rome did exerce within his Patriarchal When Constantius Bishop of Millain died he sent word by his Clark Pantaleon unto the City that they should chuse a Deacon Deus dedit to be Bishop and cause him to be consecrated lib. 9. indict 4. Ep. 21. He gave charge to Passius Bishop of Firma that he should chuse Opportunus to be Pastor if he be able lib. 10. ind 5. Ep. 13. He commandeth under the censure of Excommunication all the Bishops of Dalmatia that they ordain not any Bishop in Salona without his consent lib. ind 12. Ep. 16. He did also draw the causes of Arch-Bishops unto Rome as when Severus Bishop of Aquileia had been accused of heresie and restored and after was accused again he summoneth him according to the command of the most Christian Emperour to appear in St. Peters that there in a lawfull Synod his cause may be judged lib. 1. Ep. 16. He chargeth Natalis Bishop of Salonitan that seeing the cause of Honoratus Arch-Deacon seems to have been decided with contention in that Synod and they had ordained him against his will to exerce the Office of a Priest and removed him as unworthy the Office of a Deacon to restore the Arch-Deacon and if any scandal shall arise thereupon he willeth that both the Arch-Deacon shall be cited to appear before him and also the Bishop should direct some person for him that the cause may be examined Ib. Ep. 19. When Maximus was ordained Bishop of Salona contrary to his order now named he commandeth him to humble himself and hasten to appear before him without any excuse lib. 5. indict 14. Ep. 25. Out of the next Epistle it appears that Maximus did not obey and the Clergy and Rulers did assist him wherefore the Pope did write unto them to cause Maximus to come and appear and he promised that he would judge the cause uprightly He drew civil things to his power as lib. 8. ind 3. Ep. 6. he ordered Savinus a Sub-Deacon to cause Maria to pay unto Stopaulus and Marcellus what her father had left unto them by Testament In lib. 11. ind 6. Ep. 54. among other directions that he gave unto John going into Spain he The Bishop had power in civil things from or by the Civil Law telleth him how the Emperour Justinian had ordained that if any had an action against a Clark or Monk or Deacon he should first go unto the Bishop of the place and there the cause to be decided and if both parties did not rest contented the Judge of the place should put the sentence in execution This instance shews that the Bishops had their power in civil things by the Laws of the Empire At that time the Bishop of Rome had Revenues from other Churches and lib. 10. Ep. 47. he bids his Clark Pantaleon to bring unto him the silver which is left by the Clergy or people that he might see the mony of the Churches which the people and clergy have safely kept And in the 50. Epistle he gives order unto John Bishop of Siracuse concerning his Revenues paied there and in Panormitan Pelagius the I. mad an Act that all Metropolitans within his jurisdiction should within three months after their Consecration as they speak ask a Palle Pallium or a Bishops Coat from Rome Gratian. dist 100. cap. 1 2. it seems that they did not regard the Palles therefore Gregory obtrudes the Palles upon them and would have the Metropolitans to accept them but would suffer nothing to be taken for them li. 4. Ep. 51 56. He made a new form of Service which The first Mass at Rome they call the Masse and did add many Ceremonies that were not in use before so that Platina saith the whole institution of the Mass was invented by him Onuphrius saith that Platina comes short in describing of his inventions He first did ordain the Stations and the great Letany that is upon occasion The first Stations of a great inundation in Rome he appointed that on the 25. of April yearly the people should resort to certain Churches and if they please to confess their sins they may receive forgiveness Pol. Verg. de inven rer lib. 8. cap. 1. which custom still remains but now upon necessity whereas he said if they please Nor in that order makes he mention of indulgences albeit some of his Sermons be extant that he delivered upon these days Rabanus de institut cler lib. 2. cap. 18. expounds these Stations to be the Fast on Wednesday and Friday He ordained the Lent to begin on Ash-wednesday and the Ceremonies thereof Po. Verg. lo. ci lib. 6. cap. 3. and lest the people were detained too long from dinner he ordained that Matins be closed before nine a clock 2. SABINIAN was at Constantinople when Gregory died and was advanced into his Seat by Phocas When he came to Rome there was great dearth and the poor people besought him to follow the alms-deeds of Gregory he answered Gregory hunting after a popular applause had wasted the patrimony of the Church
He indeavoureth to have the Clergy free from the power of Princes But in the year 773. Charls King Charls his power in Rome did appoint a Synod at Rome where the Pope was with 153. Bishops and Abbots Here Charls recovereth the right which Constantine Pogonatus had let pass with Pope Benedict the II. to wit with common consent the Judges and Doctours of Law thorow the City were ordained to search the ancient Laws and Customs of the Empire how heresies and schisms may be prevented concerning the Apostolical See and the honour of Patriciatus and the Roman Empire Then 1. All the people of Rome grant unto King Charls and transfer into his perso● and his Successours all their right and power in the above-named particulars 2. After their example Adrian with all the Clergy and whole Synod did give unto Charls their right and power of chusing their great High-Priest and ordering the Apostolical See and moreover that all Arch-Bishops and Bishops throughout every Province should receive investiture from him Theodor. a Nyem Secretary to sundry Popes And Gratian. dist cap. 63. Adrianus saith more That who should act against this Decree the Synod would accurse and unless he repent would adjudge his goods unto the Royal Exchequer For this cause many waited upon the Court of King Charls hoping to have Bishopricks and advancement by him Avent Annal. lib. 4. as he did advance the Bishops of Breme Manda Padeburna c. Here is some restraint of the ambition of the Popes for a time Adrian did sit three and twenty years ten months and seventien daies 13. LEO the III. perceiveth the Romans aiming by all means unto a free More power of Charls in Rome government and he feared that either the Popes should be brought under the government of the Senate or they should be overthrown by the Greeks he thinketh it fittest that Rome should be subject unto the Pope and that the Pope should be sure of concurrence from France Catal. test ver ex Regin lib. 2. Sigeber ad an 796. Wherefore without knowledge of the Senate he sent Angilbert Abbot of Saint Richarius to advertise Charls of his election and presenteth unto him in token of loyalty Saint Peter's keys and the Ensign of the City or the Eagle and beseecheth him to send some of his Nobles who might keep the people in obedience by their Oath or Sacrament Ph. Morn in Myster ex Aimoin lib. 9. cap. 89. So soon as the Romans namely Paschasius and Campulus heard of this message they take the Pope and buffet him till they thought he was blind and cast him into the Monastery of Saint Erasmus Platin. But Continuator Eutropij saith they beat out one of his eyes and could not pick out the other because the mercy of God had preserved him and others say both his eyes were strucken out and restored again by miracle But Zonar saith they who were sent did spare him and spoiled him not of his sight Albinus did let him down by the Wall of the Monastery and he fled unto Charls he chargeth many of the Romans of usurpation and he adviseth the King to exact on them an Oath of fidelity Paschasius or Paschalis was there soon after him and accused the Pope of adultery c. Charls dismisseth them both and promiseth to be at Rome within few months In Decemb. an 800. Charls was received in Rome with all shew of honour within 8. daies he goeth into Saint Peter's Church and in presence of all the people and clergy he asketh who had any thing to say against Pope Leo. Paschasius and Campulus had published the Pope's crimes by writ but knowing the King's affection towards both parties they appear not The Bishops who were present answer The Apostolical seat is the Head of the Church and ought to be judged of none Platin. But Ph. Morn in Myster sheweth from Aimoin That because none did qualifie these crimes the Pope was absolved upon his Oath Platina saith his Oath was delayed till the next day and then he sweareth by God and the four Evangelists that all these things were false which they had layed to his charge Whereupon the King declareth him innocent and condemneth his accusers Within few daies 300. of them were beheaded in the Lateran field for their presumption and affected liberty on the 18. of December and on the 25. day Charls was proclaimed Emperour as followeth and from that time the French did alogether possess Rome and all Italy saith Zonar After that Pope Leo could not live at Rome without trouble therefore he sate at Mantua and sometimes did abide with the Emperour He is the first that Bellarmine can Canonizing of Saint● and other novelties find to have canonized a Saint de beat Sanct. lib. 1. cap. 8. He appointed the supplications of three daies before the Feast of Christ's ascension he first brought incense unto the Altars to the imitation of Jews and Heathens He sate 20. years and died An. 816. CHAP. III. Of Divers Countries 1. FEw Pastours of that Country were comparable unto the former in doctrine The corruption of Bishops devotion or zeal as we find in Catal. test ver lib. 8. from Aventin lib. 3. unworthy Priests were promoted covetous adulterous drunkards whose God was their belly given to hunting and hawking as also Pope Zachary complaineth in Epist ad Bonifac. and we will see Acts of Synods against these vices Nevertheless such men were advanced for bribes or other by-respects Likewise Bishops were more ambitious than given to seek souls unto Christ Monks were thought more religious but their religion then for the most part did consist in superstitious ceremonies and rites the people did admire them for their shew of austerity and the Bishops bear with them because they indeavour to draw all men under the obedience of the See of Rome So whilest corruption waxeth in all these Truth faileth especially the opinion of merit was not pratled in private but openly proclaimed and in the Synods they change the phrase Men shall be judged according to their works unto this Men shall be judged for their works or according to merits Preachers did not plead so much the cause of God as their own they corrupt the truth with fables as Gregory in his Epistle to Boniface testifieth and for constitution of their errours they alledge visions as Io. Bale Cent. 1. cap. 91. sheweth how Egwin Bishop of Vigornien did swear before Pope Constantine that in a Vision he was commanded to preach unto the people that the image of Saint Mary should be worshipped and he writ a Book of Apparitions which the Pope approved with his Seals and sent it unto Britwald Primat of England with express command to call a Synod at London and by his authority to recommend that book unto the people So Constantine Bishop of Cyprus in the Nicene Synod Sess 4. said a certain man driving a nail into a Wall pierced the head of Saint
shaved and made a Monk And Aventin in Annal. saith When Volarad a Bishop and Burchard Abbot of Saint Dionis at Paris were sent to understand the Pope's judgement his answer was I find in the sacred story of Divine Scriptures that the people fell away from their wretchless and lascivious King who despised the counsel of the wise men and created a sufficient man one of themselves King God himself allowing their doings all power and rule belong unto God Princes are his Ministers in their Kingdomes and rulers are chosen for the people that they should follow the will of God the chief ruler in all things and not to do what they list he is a true King that guideth the people committed to his charge according to the prescript and line of God's Law all that he hath as power glory riches honour and dignity he receiveth of the people the people create their King and the people may when the cause so requireth forsake their King It is lawfull therefore for the French and Germans to refuse this unkind Monster and to chuse one who may be able in War and Peace by his wisedom to protect and keep in safety their wives children parents goods and lives So Pope Zachary giveth his advice and pretendeth not any interest into the matter Then he writ unto Boniface Bishop of Mentz that he might anoint Pipin King of France and declare all his Subjects free from their Oath of Allegiance unto their lazy Soveraign And now the Reader may judge what Pipin did receive from Pope Zachary This was the work of many years and so ended An. 752. Here observe that Pipin was anointed but anointing The custom of anointing Kings is late or borrowed from the Iews of Kings was not in custom amongst Christians in the daies of Lactantius who in Institut lib. 4. cap. 7. speaking of Christ's name saith It was commanded unto the Jews to make an holy oil wherewith those were anointed who were called unto the Priesthood or Kingdom and now among the Romans the Robe of Purpure is the sign of their royal assumed power so unto them the anointing with oil gave the name and royal power And Augustine on Psal 45. saith It was the custom only of the Jewish Nation to anoint Kings and Priests whereby was taught that among none other but the Jewish people was the King and Priest of the world to be born Anastasius Patriarch of Constantinople did anoint Emperour Leo the I. and thereafter that came into custom to shew that the Emperour was a true Christian and free from heresie They want no colours for bringing into the Christian Church Jewish or Heathenish rites 5. John Damascen who was called Chrysoras for distinction from another Iohn Damascen of that name who lived about the year 300. had been amongst the Sarazens and for fear of death did make profession of Mahumetism but being escaped did write in defence of the Orthodox faith and began the first systeme of Divinity amongst the Greeks as afterwards Pe. Lombard among the Latines he was a maintainer of images but in many other things was an adversary to the present doctrine of Rome Lib. 1. de Orthod fide cap. 1. he saith All that is given unto us by the Law and Prophets Apostles and Evangelists we embrace acknowledge and reverence seeking no further God therefore being ignorant of nothing and providing whatsoever is profitable for us to know hath revealed it but he hath hid in silence those things whereof we could not indure the weight therefore let us love these things and abide in them neither should we pass beyond the bounds appointed by his eternal will not transgress the Divine Tradition any way Lib 3. Cap. 17. The Lord's flesh is inriched with Divine Efficacy because of the hypostatical union neither doth it fall or hath it exceeded its proper nature nor its natural properties And Cap. 18. he saith The communication of Omnipotency unto Christ-man or his Man-hood may be declared two waies First That this man Christ is almighty by communication of properties Next The proper works of God are given to the flesh as the instrument of the Deity And Lib. 4. Cap. 18. After he hath at length recommended the reading of the Scriptures he reckoneth the Books of the Old-Testament according to the Hebrew and then he saith The Wisedom of Solomon and of Jesus son of Sirach are pleasant and good but are not numbred among the Prophetical books nor were put into the Ark. And in Cap. 25. he commendeth Virginity and then he addeth this we say not derogating from marriage God forbid for we know that God blessed marriage by his presence and it is said Marriage is honourable amongst all men In Cap. 14. he saith By invocation and by working of the Holy Ghost the Bread and Wine and Water are supernaturally changed into the Body and Blood of Christ The Papishes make use of this testimony for their Transubstantiation but there is also a supernatural change of the Water in Baptism and yet no Transubstantiation neither do the Greeks believe it to this day but only a mystical change in regard of the use and effect 6. In the Epistles of Pope Zachary to Boniface it is evident that divers Many in Italy and Stain did oppose the Popes Bishops and Priests contemned the pretended Apostolical authority and his excommunications In the Epistle of Pope Adrian it appeareth that Leo Patriarch of Ravenna with-held many things from the See of Rome and that he despised the Judges whom the Pope sent thither and that he opened the Letters that were sent by some of his Diocy unto the Pope Also Regimbald and other Bishops of Lombardy did allow their Clergy to marry against the Decree of Rome Ex Epist Adrian ad Carol. When Maurice Bishop of Istria professed himself to be the faithfull servant of Saint Peter and required Pensions there unto him the people pulled out his eys and said their land was the Territory of Charls and not of the Pope Catal. test ver lib. 8. Paulin Bishop of Aquileia in his book against Felix and Eliphand Bishops of Uurgelita and T●le●o commendeth the Holy Scriptures and condemneth all opinions whatsoever that cannot be proved out of them he saith The Church is built upon the Rock Christ and it may be shaken by Hereticks but cannot be drowned because it is strengthned by the right hand of Christ he saith Teachers and every Christian should fight against heretical opinions and refute them for a Souldier of Christ should not be basely afraid for the force of approaching Battel nor by straying seek the lurking holes of harmless escaping but being girded with the weapons of their own Warfare should couragiously pierce the hearts of their enemies with spiritual darts out of the Bow of the Scriptures 7. Aponius a French man then writ several books in Cant. lib. 1. he saith Aponius The Lord hath given his fiery word unto this World in the
body of Christ which is sanctified by many Priests through all the World and maketh it to be one body of Christ and as that bread and blood do pass into the body of Christ so all which in the Church do eat worthily are the one body of Christ as he himself saith He who eats my flesh and drinketh my blood abides in me and I in him Nevertheless that flesh which he did assume and that bread and all the Church do not make three bodies but one body and as they which do communicate of the body and blood of the Lord are made one body with him so they which do wittingly communicate of things offered unto Idols are one body with the Divel And in the next Chap. he saith Christ having ended the solemnities of the old Passover .... immediately he passeth unto the new Passover which he left unto his Church to be frequented or frequently observed in remembrance of his Passion and our redemption He did break the bread which he gave unto his Disciples to shew the breaking of his Body and his Passion was not to be without his own will as he had said I have power to lay down my life Take ye eat ye this is my body which shall be delivered for you As the flesh of Christ which he did assume in the Virgins womb is his true body and was killed for our salvation so the bread which Christ gave unto his Disciples and unto all them which are predestinated for eternal life and which the Priests do consecrate in the Church daily with the vertue of the God-head which filleth that bread is the true body of Christ neither are they two bodies that flesh which he did assume and that bread but they make one true body of Christ In so far that when the Bread is broken and eaten Christ is sacrificed and eaten and yet he abideth whole and alive and as that Body which he did lay on the Cross was offered for our salvation and redemption so daily that bread is offered unto God for our salvation and redemption which although it is seen to be bread is the body of Christ for our Lord and Redeemer providing for our frailty because he knew that we are frail unto sin did deliver unto us this Sacrament that because he cannot now die and we do sin daily we might have a true sacrifice by which we may be expiated Therefore because they make one body and are offered for our redemption he said This is my body which shall be delivered for you and he did add Do this that is sanctifie this body Into my remembrance that is of my Passion and of your Redemption because I have redeemed you with my blood The Lord leaving this wholsom Sacrament unto all beleevers that he might fasten this into their hearts and memory did after the manner of a man who approaching unto death leaveth some precious gift unto a certain friend saying Have this with all diligence by thee in remembrance of me that when thou seest it thou mayest remember me Which friend receiving that gift of his most dear friend if he did love him withall his heart cannot but condole and be sad for the death of his friend whensoever he beholdeth that gift left by his friend Likewise we how oft soever we come to consecrate or receive the Sacrament of that eternal gift which the Lord being to suffer left unto us to be kept in remembrance of him should come with fear and compunction of heart and with all reverence calling to mind with how great love he did love us which did offer himself for us that he might redeem us Likewise and the Cup understand he gave unto them after he had supped saying This Cup is the new Testament in my blood i. e. the Cup which I give unto you signifieth the new Testament as Fulgentius or it confirms the new Testament in my blood or by my blood Here are all the words of that book which concern the change or sacrifice in the Sacrament and we see mention of a change and a real change and a real sacrifice but no word of a change of a substance of the bread which still remaineth and is broken after consecration in remembrance of Christ's Passion and of our redemption And observe these words The bread which Christ gave unto his Disciples and unto all which are predestinated for life eternal and which the Priests do consecrate daily with power of the God-head which filleth that bread is the true body of Christ neither are they two bodies the flesh which he did assume and that bread but they make one true body of Christ Now what bread is that which he giveth unto all them which are predestinated for life but even which he did assume in the unity of his person in the Virgins womb And the Elementary bread is no more said to be his body than it is said The Rock was Christ and it is his body as all which do eat worthily are his body or made one body with him and that is not by Transubstantiation although really but in a mystery or spiritual manner albeit also the manner of the union between the Bread and Christ's body and between Beleevers and Christ's body be different in the special kind of mystery The bread doth pass into the body of Christ really in the own manner not by change of substance but of use signification office and condition And that bread is the very sacrifice of Christ in remembrance as the gift which one friend leaveth unto another in remembrance of his love so that whensoever we do sin we may have daily in remembrance that true sacrifice whereby we may be expiated And the consecrating of that bread is the sacrifice of Christ as the eating of the Lamb was the Passover the one in remembrance of their ancient deliverance out of Aegypt and the other in remembrance of Christ's Passion and of our Redemption And that bread is the body of Christ so that after the blessing or consecration it is seen to be bread and is broken and eaten These all are spoken there of that bread and therefore according to that testimony the bread is not transubstantiated but is a remembrance of Christ's Passion and sacrifice if we will speak properly And moreover at that time all Beleevers did communicate and take part of the Cup for which cause it is said there the Cup is called the communication of Christ's blood When the whole testimony is considered it serveth more against the Romish Church now than for them But to return to the Authour of the book it was Printed That Exegesis was not written by Haymo at Paris under the name of Haymo Bishop of Halberstad but as the learned Antiquary Bishop Usher hath observed in Histor Gottesc neither is it his for though the Argument before every Epistle be said to be Haymo's yet before none of them is it said that the Exegesis is his And I add
another reason the opinions of Haymo are different from that Exegesis I will name but one Haymo on the Revel lib. 1. near the end saith The Pillars of the Temple are not only they who are more perfect as Paul saith Peter and James and John which seemed to be Pillars c. Here Haymo not only calleth these three more perfect but Pillars also which is more then Paul saith but this Exegesis speaks not so much of them for on Gal. 2. at these words which seemed to be something or as we have Who were of reputation it is written there They seemed unto themselves to be something for they did seem to have learning and vertue of themselves but they neither had learning nor vertue of themselves nor of their own merits and therefore although they did seem unto the people to be something they were nothing He who writes so liberally of the three Apostles would not probably have written so sparingly of them in the other place and so the Authour of the Exegesis but by Remigius Bishop of Lions and is contrary to the present Church of Rome in many particulars following would not have called Peter the head of the Church Who then is the Authour of that Exegesis The above-named Remigius Bishop of Lions as Bishop Usher proveth loc cit and we may find that his doctrine in that Exegesis doth accord with that which we have heard he did maintain concerning election free-will c. as appears by these passages On Rom. 5. he saith As by Adam sin and death did enter so by Christ came justification and eternal life therefore the Apostle saith We are reconciled unto God because as by one man sin entred into the World that is into the universality of mankind except Christ which is from above and by sin death came so death both of body and soul hath gone over all men even as on the first man in whom all have sinned So by our Lord Jesus Christ justification hath entred and by justification life eternal ... for in him all men have sinned which were in his loins as Levi was in the loins of his father when he paied tithes And he saith congruously that sin entred first and then death by sin because so soon as he did sin he became mortal as the Lord had foretold saying In whatsoever day thou shalt eat thereof thou shalt die the death He did sin by coveting and eating and he was made mortal in sinning Amongst other things observe here that Remigius makes no exception of sin in the universality of mankind but only of Christ and therefore the Virgin Mary is not excepted and after the same manner do all the Ancients speak in this point On Cap. 9. What man can declare why the Almighty God did chuse Jacob before he was born and rejected Esau when neither the one nor the other could do any good or ill except that on him that is on Jacob he would bestow his grace and mercy and on Esau he would fullfill his just judgment .... therefore as it was not the purpose of God and his predestination according to election of the good merit of Jacob so the election of the Gentiles was not according to the election of merits but according to the free grace and predestination of God therefore for what cause Jacob was chosen without good works and Esau was hated without ill works it is only known unto God who knows all things before they be and whose judgment is alwaies just ..... He said unto Moses I will have mercy on whom ... This is the order On whom I will have mercy by calling him unto my faith I will have mercy by giving him my faith that he may beleeve in me and I will shew compassion on him that he may live righteously and be mercifull and persevere in good works according to which he shall receive the reward Therefore not of him who willeth understand is the will nor of him who runneth is the race but of God shewing mercy is mercy that he giveth unto man to will good to do and to persevere The only good will is not sufficient unless also the mercy of God prevene him unto this end to give unto him to will what is good and to perfect the same good as the Psalmist saith His mercy shall prevene me and his mercy shall follow me But haply one will say Why are the Elect rewarded or what reward have they deserved if both the good will and the perfecting of the good work be given unto them of God I answer therefore are the Elect worthy of remuneration because so soon as they do perceive that they are prevened by the grace of God they do labour with all their indeavours to obey his will For the Scripture saith to Pharao The Scripture speaketh not by it self but another by it as here God speaketh These last words I have marked against them which say The Scriptures is dumb and dead At these words Hath not the Potter power ... he saith So the Almighty God the Potter of mankind hath power out of the mass of perdition and sin that is out of the mass of mankind to make one vessel unto honour that is to create one for this end that he may be honoured in him and that he honour him by calling him unto his faith and by saving him unto life and another unto dis-honour that is in his just judgment to destroy the Reprobates because of their wickedness for of a corrupt mass all the vessels are corrupt but if the Potter by the Engine of his Art will purifie some of them from the fault of the mass by baking it in the fire may he not be magnified in those And that he suffereth some unpurified he is not to be blamed because he continueth in his power for the mass is his On Cap. 11. at these words I have left 7000 ... saith he neither saith he Are left unto me but I have left and reserved unto my self 7000 men which when others became Idolaters have not bowed ....... And it is to be considered because according to the election of God's grace that is according to the gift of Predestination the remnant is saved not according to the merit of their works wherefore he saith in the Epistle unto the Ephes As he hath chosen us before the foundation of the World in him i. e. in Christ that we should be holy and unblamable And if of grace they are saved who beleeve amongst the Jews not now was it of the works of the Law by which they thought to be justified who continue in infidelity else grace were not grace that is if they were saved otherwise which cannot be but by the grace of God or else grace it self were not grace but a merit ..... But the election hath obtained it that is they who were chosen out of that multitude whom before he called a remnant now he calleth election and as before circumcision is taken for the
This Act is to be expounded by another following in the Councel at Cabilon And the Fathers protest that if it seem they have passed bounds in admonishing his clemency the Act be amended Ca. 8. We will that Bishops have power to provide rule govern and dispense Spiritual and Ecclesiastical things according to the authority of Canons and that Laicks be obedient unto Bishops in their ministry to rule the Churches of God to defend widows and fatherless And that Bishops should consent unto Counts and Judges to do justice and that just Laws be not corrupted by lies false witness false oaths or rewards Ca. 10. We decree that there be a distinction between them which are said to have left the World and them who yet follow it It is therefore provided by a Law of the Fathers that who are separated from the secular life should abstain from worldly pleasures as that they be not present at games nor unhonest and filthy bankets Jerom ad Nepotian saith We should love the houses of all Christians as our own but so that they may know us rather for comforters in their griefs then feasters in their joviality let them not be Usurers nor seekers of filthy gain nor exerce any fraud let them fly the love of money as the mother of many evils let them leave secular offices and affairs let them not ascend the steps of honour ambitiously let them not take gifts for the benefits of Divine medicine beware of guile and oaths fly envy hatred and back-biting nor walk with wandring eys with unstable and wanton tongues or proud carriage but let them shew forth the shamefacedness of their minds in simple habit and conversation let them altogether abhor the filthiness of words as well as of deeds eschue the frequent visitations of widows and virgins and no way haunt the houses of women let them indeavour alwaies to keep the chastity of an undefiled body giving due obedience unto their Superiours Lastly let them be diligent in teaching and reading in Hymns and Psalms continually They who give themselves to be servants in God's worship should be such that all that while they study to knowledge they may administer doctrine unto the people Ca. 11. Abbots and Monks are ordained to conform their lives unto the rule of Benedict even as they have promised Ca. 12. Monks are forbidden to go out of their Monasteries unless upon necessity and with leave of their Abbot Ca. 16. To leave the world is to resist the pleasures of the world as Paul saith Who use the World as if they used it not Ca. 17. We who have left the World should wholly observe this that we have spiritual armour and forsake secular armour nor may we stay the Laity from bearing weapons because it is an old custom Ca. 24. We ordain that fasting be kept four times a year by all men that is the first week of March and all should come unto the Church on the fourth sixth and Sabboth daies the second week of June on the same daies and let all fast untill the ninth hour or third hour after noon likewise the third week of September and the whole week before Christ's nativity Ca. 35. If any shall proudly contemn the Fasts and will not keep them with other Christians it is ordained in the Gangrene Councel that he shall be accursed untill he profess amendment Ca. 38. We command that Tithes be alwaies payed which God hath commanded to be given unto him lest if any one hold from God his due God take away his necessaries from him for his sin Ca. 44. Let the people be alwaies admonished to make their Oblations in the Church for this is a soverain remedy for their own souls and the souls of theirs Ca. 45. Let Priests admonish the people alwaies to learn their Creed which is the sum of faith and the Lord's prayer and we will that they be condignly censured which contemn to learn these two and therefore they should send their children unto a School or Monastery or to a Priest that they may learn the Catholick faith and the Lord's prayer that they may be able to teach others at home and who cannot otherwise let him learn them in his own language 2. In the Councel at Worms is first a Confession of faith which is a plain and sound exposition of the Creed of the Apostles and no mention in it of Christ's descending into Hell Ca. 1. None should presume to make chrism but the Bishop Ca. 4. Let no Church be consecrated untill the Bishop receive the gift of the Church confirmed by Charter and sufficient means for him who shall serve in it Ca. 8. Of the Revenues of the Church and Offerings of the Beleevers let four portions be made one for the Bishop another to the Clarks for their service a third for the poor and strangers and the fourth to be kept for the Fabrick of the Church Ca. 10. All Clarks are forbidden to lie with their wives upon pain of deposition Ca. 17. Let no Bishop Priest nor Deacon have Dogs for hunting nor Hawks Ca. 25. Let Pennance be injoined unto Penitents at the pleasure of the Priests according to the difference of faults and quality of time persons places age sighs and affection of offenders Ca. 32. All Christians are forbidden to marry any of their kindred so far as can be known Ca. 35. Women who cause themselves to make abortion should without all doubt be punished as murtherers but who in their sleep do smother their babes we should judge more easily of them because they have fallen into this mischance unwillingly Ca. 41. Who continue in malice and envy after they are admonished by the Priest should be excommunicated Ca. 51. Unto each Church a manse should be given free from all service and the Priests should give no service but Ecclesiastical for Tithes for the peoples oblations alterages Church-yards but if they have any other thing let them pay dues unto their Superiours Ca. 51. When means may be had at the sight of the Bishop let every Church have their own Presbyter Ca. 52. If a Church be new built in a Village let the Tithes of that Village be payed unto that Church Ca. 61. When witnesses cannot be had to testifie of the certainty that an Infant was baptized nor themselves can shew that they were baptized without all scruple they may be baptized Our neighbours the Mores advise us to do so because they redeem many such from the Barbarians 3. In the first words of the Councel at Rhemes An. 815 it is said expressly This is assembled by the Emperour after the manner of ancient Emperours Here the Epistles and Gospels were read for information of Deacons Ca. 6. The Missals were examined for information of Priests Ca. 9. The rules of Benedict were read for reformation of Monks Ca. 10. Liber Pastorales of Gregory was read for reformation of Pastours Ca. 11. Divers Sentences of several Fathers were read that both Prelates
had made the death of Christ unprofitable unto themselves which certainly is horrible to be spoken and very lamentable seeing that death brought salvation unto many This was the mind of Basilius also and nevertheless we find in the Gospel That he might give his life a ransom for many to be expounded for all Cap. 10. Can never with these sacrifices which were offered year by year ..... If they being once offered had been available they should no more have been offered but when the oblation was made year by year and often it is clear that they were too weak for bringing salvation unto them who were desirous of it and therefore after the first offering followed another and again and again another for amongst Drugs that are called most valid and efficacious which being but once applied or drunken doth heal and cure but what must be often changed and applied hath the less vertue of healing and doth no good unto the sick But one may ask Do we not offer without blood Yea indeed but then we remember the death of Christ and we have but one oblation and not many seeing He is offered but once for we offer him continually or rather we remember his oblation even as if at this time He were sacrificed wherefore it is certain that we have but one sacrifice and the Law had many although as it is said before it was offered the oftner that it might be the more profitable unto many which nevertheless is far otherwise But our sacrifice as I have said is but one and once offered and continueth whole both in this life and that to come and it is more perfect for it is but one blood and once poured forth and one body although it was offered for many and it is not many as it is but one sacrifice which is offered for we do offer that continually as if it were present So far from Theophylact. But here some may object that Theophylact agreeth not with the Reformed Church in Theoph●lact is vindicated many particulars It is true and therefore I say often we must make separation of the dross from the pure gold but his difference is supposed to be greater then it is Porsena in his Epistle unto the Reader before the Gospels saith Theophylact follows Chrysostom concerning free-will and faith and some other things and therefore in expounding some places he is somewhat more violent which I say that herein you should use discretion which knowest thy self to be addicted unto the Canonical Scriptures only and not to scar thee from reading of him as some are wont when any passage displeaseth they throw the book away So say I in reading of any book written by man we who are addicted to the holy Scriptures only must use discretion But it seemeth Porsena speaks not this unto Papists because they are not addicted to the holy Canonical Scriptures only and he saith that Theophylact is more violent in expounding some places where certainly Porsena understands that he crosseth the Tenets of the Romish Church But this may be more clear by particulars 1. Porsena hath often marked the margine with liberum arbitrium as if Theophylact did in point of free will there assert the Romish errour concerning free-will and I know that others do alledge his testimony against the doctrine of the Reformed Church howbeit he speak nothing against us nor for them as is clear by inspection of particular places On Luk. 15. fol. 103. on the margine is Liberum arbitrium and in the line is The substance of man is rational whereupon followeth free-will for all rational creatures have a free-will and the Lord hath given them reason that they may use it freely c. It is clear that Theophylact speaks there of the nature of man absolutely or without any relation to any particular condition of man before the fall or after the fall and he speaketh against the Stoicks and Manicheans which did hold that the actions of men were carried by fate or pressing necessity and therefore it follows there If God would have us to be compelled he had not made us rational and of a free-will On Ioh. 6. at the words Will ye also go away he saith The Lord saith not Go ye away for this had been to repel them but he asketh will ye go away whereby he makes it free whether they will follow him or not and he sheweth that he will not have them to follow him in fear On these words also hath Porsena fixed Liberum arbitrium As also on Mat. 16. at the words If any will follow me he saith to the same purpose The Lord saith If any will to shew free-will and not coacted vertue These and many more places are clearly spoken against the necessity of fate or coaction which now is not controverted But if you ask By what power is an unregenerated man converted he hath said it already on 2 Cor. 4. and Eph. 1 and 2. Or if you ask By what power doth a regenerate man continue in the faith and practise of godliness Theophylact teacheth that on Phil. 2. at the words For it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do Whereas he had said with fear and trembling now he saith that they need not fear for I have not spoken so that ye should despair but be the more wary for if ye take heed and be diligent God will make all perfect for it is he which makes you prompt to such a good will that we will good things and also bringeth such promptitudes of our mind unto an end for God worketh in us both the will that is he inableth you that ye desire good things and he will augment this good will and kindle it that it may be the more fervent ..... the Apostle takes not away free-will but willeth that we should alwaies give thanks unto God and committed all unto him Mark saith Theophylact but this manner of speaking he saith in you who work your salvation with fear and trembling for in such men which are willingly led unto good God worketh all things According to good will that is that it may be fullfilled in you what is acceptable unto God ..... for God will inable us to live rightly although it were no other cause but only this because so he willeth 2. It is objected that Theophylact and election by foreseen faith or works saith that election was made upon the fore-sight of faith and good works as on Eph. 1. it is When he saith He hath chosen he pointeth forth both the mercy of God and their vertue to wit whom God had separated as who were to be good I answer In these words Theophylact toucheth not the moving cause of election but only teacheth that God had chosen none but such as were to be good and godly and this he insists oft upon against them which held that faith or profession of faith is sufficient to salvation although men do not
other was like a Criminal Court both which were different from worldly Courts in that the one had execution by the Authority of a Judge forcing men unto obedience and the other by the onely willingness of submitting parties which if they refuse to obey the Ecclesiastical Judge could do no more but commit the cause unto the judgement of God which as it pleaseth God shall be executed in this life or that to come And upon good ground was the name of Charity given unto the Ecclesiastical Judicatory because by it only was the defender moved to submit unto the Church and the Church to judge with so great sincerity of the Judge and obedience of the offender that there was no place left unto corrupt affection in the one nor of repining in the other and this great love made the punishment of chastising seem the more grievous even unto the chastiser so that in the Church was never any censure inflicted without great mourning of the people and greater of the Rulers and hence it came to pass that at that time the word mourning was used for chastising So St. Paul rebuking the Corinthians that they had not censured the incestuous man said And ye have not mourned that he that hath done this deed might be taken away And in the other Epistle I fear lest when I come I shall not finde you such as I would and lest I shall be wail many which have sinned already Now it seemeth the judgement of the Church as is usual in all Societies was ordered by some one which was President and propounded things and after deliberation gathered the suffrages which part seeing it is most convenient unto the most able and fit man without doubt was conferred on the Bishop But when the Churches were multiplied the propositions and deliberations were done by the Bishop first in the Colledge of Presbyters and Deacons which were called the Presbytery and there purposes were brought to ripeness that they might have the last stroke in the publique meeting of the Church This was yet the Custom about the year 250. as is clear in the Epistles of Cyprian who writing of them who had sacrificed unto Idols unto the Presbytery saith It is not his maner to do any thing without their advice nor without consent of the people and he writeth unto the people that when he shall return he will in their presence and according to their judgement examine the causes and merits and unto the Priests which by themselves had received some delinquents he writeth that they give account unto the people Because of the ingenuity and charity of the Bishops at that time it came to pass that all men almost did rest on their opinion and the Church when charity became cold and the charge that Christ had laid on them was carelesly performed left all unto the Bishop and ambition which is a slie affection and ready to creep into the heart with the shadow and shew of vertue did perswade the Bishops to accept it gladly But that alteration came not to the height till the persecutions were ceased for then the Bishops did as it were set up a throne unto themselves which became most frequent by the multitude of pleas with the accession of temporary riches And this form of Judicatory albeit differing from the former wherein all things were carried with consent of the Church did yet continue in the same sincerity And therefore the Emperor Constantine having tried the fruit of this Court in deciding controversies and how the vertue of Religion was able to discern many tricks and guiles which the Judges had not perceived made a Law that there should be no appealing from the Bishops sentence and the Judges should put them in execution Yea and when a cause was begun before the Secular Judge whatsoever was the state of it if either of the parties howbeit the other were unwilling did appeal unto the Bishop the cause without delay should be referred unto his consideration And then the judgement of the Bishop began to be Courtly and when he had the Magistrate to be the executioner of his Decree he taketh unto him the names of Episcopal Iurisdiction Episcopal Audience and such Titles Likewise the Emperor Valens thought good in the year 365. to enlarge this Court by giving unto them the inspection of the prices of things set forth to be sold which business was not acceptable unto the good and moderate Bishops for Possidonius reporteth that when Augustine had been taken up with such work untill noon and sometimes till night he called it Angaria a forced toil whereby his minde was distracted from things more properly belonging unto him and for these rusling broyls he left more useful things undone as neither did Paul go about these things which were not suitable to a Preacher but left them unto others Nevertheless when not a few of the Bishops did abuse that Authority that was granted unto them by Constantine's Law the same Law after 70. years was recalled by Arcadius and Honorius and it was ordained that Bishops should judge in causes of Religion onely and in Civil no other way but with consent of parties and also it was declared that they had no Court of Judgement This Law was little regarded in Rome because of the great power of the Bishop therefore in the year 452. Valentinian living in the City did renew that Law and caused it to be put in execution But the succeeding Princes did ratifie unto them again that power as Justinian did establish the Bishops Court and Audience and assigned unto them not onely the affairs of Religion but the Ecclesiastical faults of the Clergy and several powers over the Laicks By these degrees Correction which was appointed by Christ upon the account of Charity was turned to Dominion and was the occasion of losing the ancient reverence and obedience wherewith Christians were wont to regard their Bishops I know well that in words they will deny their Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to be Dominion like the Secular but I cannot see what real difference they can shew Certainly St. Paul writing to Timothy and Titus sheweth a clear difference Let not a Bishop be given to lucre not a striker But now it is most usual to pay unto the Bishop the expences of Law and at his command to put into prison even as in Secular Courts But when the Provinces in the West were divided and the Empire was made up of Italy France and Germany and Spain became a Kingdom in these four Countreys the Princes made choise of Bishops to be their Counsellors and then by the confusion of spiritual and temporal power oh how the Authority of the Bishops Court augmented within 200. years they drew unto them all criminal and Civil power over the Clergy yea and over the Laicks in many particulars pretending that the cause is Ecclesiastical They they forge a mixt Judicatory wherein either a Bishop or a Magistrate which of the two shall first
and tokens of bondage and have no Land in Scotland unless they shall dwell in it and if they will not dwell there the Scots should give them for their present possessions 30000 marks of Silver All this time the English were not of one accord for the King followed the counsel of Spencer Earl of Arundel the other Nobility caused the King to banish him but the next year he was restored to the great disturbance of the Kingdom at last they conspire to imprison the King and Hugh Spencer suffered death Tho. Cooper 2. When King Robert came to great age he ordained in Parliament his Successors to wit his Son David a child of eight years old which was espoused to Johanna Daughter of Edward the II. and if he should die without childe he ordained his Son in law Robert Stuart to succeed After he had exhorted the Estates to keep amity and unity he gave them three counsels 1. To beware that the Isles Aebudes be never given unto one man 2. That they never hazzard all their strength in one fight with the English 3. That they make not long truce with them After him Thomas Randolf Earl of Murray was chosen Regent of Scotland he was a good Justiciary and by no means would spare thieves and robbers So that when a Gentleman came from the Pope's Court and thought himself secure because he had obtained the Pope's pardon Thomas caused to apprehend him and said The pardon of sin belongeth unto the Pope but punishment of the body is in the King's hand Buchan lib. 9. 3. An. 1328. Charls the IV. King of France died without children then The title of England unto France Edward the III. King of England his Sisters Son claimeth the Crown of France as nearest Heir The French prefer Philip de Valois the Uncle's Son and they exclude Edward by a Law which they call Salica excluding women from succession At the first when the Estates of France had received Philip Edward did him homage for his Lands in France but when he was denied of a just demand wars began between these two Nations which ceased not altogether until the year 1495. as Tho. Cooper sheweth or rather until the days of Queen Elizabeth for sometimes the French prevailed and sometimes the English even so far as to be crowned at Paris and held Parliaments and had Deputies governing France Sometimes were truce of thirteen years or of ten years but never an absolute peace before Queen Elizabeth In the year 1393. the King of Armenia came into France and shewed how the Turks and Scythians were not only oppressing Hungary but were aiming at the conquest of all Christendom and in the mean time Christians were devouring one another with such words he perswaded both the Kings into a truce for four years Frossard Hist lib. 4. But I leave Civil affairs and return unto the Church 4. In the year 1306. an English Eremite preached at Pauls in London that some Sacraments that were then in use in the Church were not of Christ's institution therefore he was committed to prison Io. Bale ex Io. Baconthorp in Sent. lib. 4. dist 2. q. 1. 5. That John Baconthorp wrote on the Sentences where he followeth the truth in many things especially he refuteth sundry subtilties of Io. Scotus as Baptista Mantuanus hath marked Iste tenebrosi damnat vestigia Scoti Et per sacra novis it documenta viis Hunc habeant quibus est sapientia grata redundat Istius in sacris fontibus omne sophos He wrote de Domino Christi where he proveth that the highest Bishop in every Kingdom should be under Princes Bale Cent. 4. sect 82. 6. Richard Primate of Ireland alias Armachanus was his disciple and taught the same doctrine he translated the Bible into Irish In a Sermon at Paul's Cross in London An. 1356. he said In the estate of innocence none had been a beggar therefore according to that estate unless the law of necessity do press men none desireth nor should be a beggar as neither was Christ willingly a beggar the Law also forbiddeth it Deut. 15. There shall not be a beggar among you He discovered the hypocrisie of Friers in that though they professed poverty yet they had stately houses like the Palaces of Princes and more costly Churches then any Cathedral more richer ornaments then all the Princes more and better books then all the Doctors they had Cloisters and walking places so stately and large that men of Arms might fight on horse-back and encounter one another with their spears in them and their apparel richer then the greatest Prelates These Sermons are extant The next year he appeared before Innocentius the VI. and some of the four Orders of Friers appeared against him and he proved his propositions stoutly and manifestly against them that in many respects they had lest their first rules but saith Walsing in Edwar. III. the English Clergy sent not unto him according to their promises but the Friers wanted not plenty of money and so lite pendente before the cause was decided the Friers obtained a confirmation of their priviledges Armachanus died there at Avenion and was canonized 7. William Ockam was a disciple of Jo. Scotus but he became adversary of his doctrine he was the Author of the Sect of Nominales whereby new occasions of controversies arose to withdraw men from the study of faith He was a follower of Pope Nicolaus the V. and therefore was excommunicated by Pope John Then he thought it more safe to live under the Emperor's protection and he said unto the Emperor Lewis Defend me Caesar from the injury of the Pope by thy sword and I will defend thee by the word by writing and invincible reasons and so they did so long as they lived He wrote a Compendium Errorum of Pope John the XXII and a dialogue between a Clark and a Soldier wherein he handleth these questions 1. Whether Ockam's questions the Pope hath any primacy by right from God 2. Whether Peter had any primacy or was ever Bishop of Rome 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome may err Concerning the Emperor he discusseth 1. Whether one man may discharge the offices both of Priest and Emperor 2. Whether the Emperor hath his power from God only or from the Pope also 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome have any power from Christ to commit any jurisdiction unto Caesar and to other Princes 4. Whether Caesar after his election hath power to rule the Republick 5. Whether Kings anointed by a Bishop receive any power from him 6. Whether these Kings be any way subject unto their anointer 7. Whether the seven Electors give as great authority unto the elected Caesar as succession giveth unto other Princes c. All which he disputeth on both sides and concludeth always against the Extravagants He wrote also against Pope Clemens and calleth him an Heretick the Antichrist an hater of Christian poverty a foe of the Common-wealth an
schismatical side This Cardinal Cusan in his Books De Concordantia Catholica which he directed unto the Councel at Basil maintaineth these positions All the promises which Christ spoke unto Peter as I will give thee the keys I have prayed for thee and such other things should be understood of the Church universally and not particularly of Peter or his Successors especially since many Popes have been Schismaticks and Hereticks Every Prelate hath place in the Church according to the Dignity of his Seat and so the Bishop of Rome hath attained such precedency in the Church as Rome had antiently among the Nations Or if they have place according to the holiness of him which first sate there certainly Jerusalem should have the primacy where the great high Priest did wash his Church with his blood And why should not Ephesus the seat of St. John be preferred to Alexandria the seat of Mark and so of the rest The Councel dependeth not upon the head thereof but upon the consent of all the Assessors although the Bishop of Rome were present there he hath not more power there then a Metropolitan in his Provincial Synod Without all controversie a universal Councel is above the Bishop of Rome whose power is sometimes said to have been from Christ yet in more places we finde that his primacy is from man and dependeth on the Canons wherefore as he may be judged and deposed by a Councel so he cannot abrogate nor change nor destroy the Canons of Councels In lib. 3. cap. 2. ss by many testimonies of Antiquity he proveth it false that Constantine gave or could give the Empire of the West unto the Pope These testimonies are exstracted and subjoyned to the Declamation of Laur. Valla in Fascic rer expetend There also Cusanus saith Neither is it true that the Pope gave it unto Charls or transferred it from the Greeks unto the Germans and it is most false that the Princes Electors were instituted by the Pope and that they discharge the office of Election in his name In the contrary The Emperor dependeth on God alone and it is not necessary that he be confirmed by the Pope nor may the Pope depose him The Emperors in old time called the General Councels as other Princes have taken care of Provincial Synods When he was Legate in Germany he hindred and discharged the carrying of the Sacrament in their Processions Crantz in Metrop He addeth Because the Sacrament was ordained for use and not for ostentation 23. In the year 1442. the Emperor Frederick had a Diet at Mentz where they spoke of casting off the Pope's yoke in time of the schism But in the time of Pope Nicolaus this Neutrality was taken away by the mediation of Aen. Sylvius and therefore he got a red hat Nevertheless because the conditions that he had made in name of the Pope were not fulfilled the Germans assembled again and by advice of Diether Bishop of Mentz they would provide for themselves according to the Pragmatica Sanctio against the tyranny of the Roman Church and they agree upon Decrees concerning the election of Prelates the collation of Benefices the pleading of causes the granting of pardons the exactions of tenths c. And if the Pope shall discern against them they resolve to provide for themselves by an appellation 24. Martin Meyer Chancellor unto this Diether wrote an Epistle unto Cardinal Aen. Sylvius and complaineth in his Master's name that the Canons of Constance and Basil were not observed that Calixtus as if he were not tied to the covenant of his Predecessors did oppress Germany he contemneth the election of their Prelates and reserveth their Benefices of all sorts unto his Cardinals and Secretaries expectative graces are given without number Annates or mid-fruits are exacted rigorously yea more is extorted then is owed the Government of Churches is not given unto them which deserve best but who payeth most new Indulgences are sent dayly for squeezing money ..... a thousand means are devised whereby the See of Rome draweth gold from us as if we were witless Barbarians .... Our Princes being awakened have resolved and decreed to cast off this bondage and to defend their former liberty In the end he congratulateth his late advancement and lamenteth that so many evils hapned in his time But saith he God will have it otherwise and his decree must have place By these words Meyer giveth to understand more then he speaketh This Epistle is printed with Sylvius his description of Germany 25. The Greeks wrote unto the Bohemians in this manner The holy A Letter from Greece unto the Bohemians Church of Constantinople and Mother of all Orthodox Believers unto all the Masters and each of the famous Brethren and Sons beloved in Jesus Christ in Bohemia salvation by the Son of the glorious Virgin and an hundred-fold increase of spiritual fruit The holy Church of the heavenly Bridegroom which is the Head of the whole Church hath not greater pleasure then that she heareth that her Sons walk in the truth therefore when not without most great pleasure and as it were a pledge of common fruit the fertility and growth of them who couragiously suffer persecution for the testimony of true faith came unto the ears of the same godly and bountiful Mother especially by a Brother and Son Constantinus Anglicus the bearer of these presents and a reverend Priest we were more plainly advertised that ye hearken not unto the novelties that are brought by some into the Church of Christ but that ye are constant in the foundation of faith which was given unto us by our Lord and his Disciples The holy Church hath incontinently written unto you and intended to exhort you into concord with her and not according to the forged union of Florence which was separate from the true and lawful Councel which union should rather be called a diremption from the truth for which cause we received not that union but altogether refused it and according to the immoveable decree of truth wherein only we can be truly and safely united for the Church of Christ doubteth not of these things which she heard reported of you as is said Seeing therefore you have judged it expedient to contraveen the perillous novations of Rome ye shall be of one mind with this Church by means of the Holy Scriptures which is the true Judge For although no good report of you came unto us before that ye did not resist the Roman novelties but rather were enemies to the ancient traditions of the Catholick and Christian Church yet now we are informed more surely that ye are revived and returned unto the common religion of Christians and unto true godliness and that you leave not your Mother but being zealous with true love of your true Mother have a singular desire to promove and inlarge her which we understood by the coming of this devout Priest as we have said who hath declared unto us particularly the estate
would overcom you After all this so feeble was he in mind that he made a recantation Orthae Grat. in Fascic rer expetend His condemnation did not please Mr. John de Keiserbergh nor Mr. Engelin de Brunswick two learned and upright men especially Engelin said They had dealt too precipitately with such a man and many of his Articles may he sustained and that his accusation had proceeded only from the envy of the Thomists Ibid. ex Examine Magistrali Iohannis de Vesalia 29. Dominicus Bishop of Brixia writ unto Pope Pius the II. a Treatise with this Title Reformatio Curiae Romanae he toucheth the malady softly but truth appears for he saith If we consider the antient Popes and their Acts so that we follow the evil in them and then we compare the reverend Cardinals Bishops and Prelates and of other degrees with them surely we will weep with Jeremiah Lamen 4. Alas how is the gold obscured the good colour thereof is changed the stones of the Sanctuary are scattered in the streets that is the Prelates in the broad ways which lead unto destruction as Gregory expoundeth Item This Reformation belongeth unto the Pope especially who as the head of others should procure it and set his minde on it but he who will reform others must look unto himself and unto his family for the life of the Pastor is an example and precedent unto others and when the head is sick the members cannot be well 30. Sigismund Duke of Austria could not indure the insolency of Pius Two Appeals from the Pope the II. his Legate therefore Pius did excommunicate him By advice of Gregory Heimburgh a Doctor of the Civil and Canon Laws Sigismund appealeth unto a Councel and sent his appe●l●tion to be published at Rome Pius understanding that Heimburgh was the Author of this appellation excommunicated him also And because he dwelt at Nuremburgh and was Advocate for that City Pius wrote unto the Burgrave and the Senate an Epistle where he calleth this form of appellation a new heresie and a divellish inspiration because they with scoffs of appellation do appeal unto a thing which is not He sheweth that he had excommunicated Hemburg for Treason and Heresie and he commanded to banish him and to escheat all his movables and immovables and to proceed against him as an Heretick Hemburg appealed from this Sentence also unto a future Councel nevertheless he was forced to remove from that City and went to Bohemia untill Diether Bishop of Mentz was vexed by the Pope and sent for him In the appellation of Sigismund he sheweth the equity of his cause and the iniquity of the curse he appealeth not unto the Pope being ill advised unto him being better advised but unto his Successour or unto a general Councel that shall be assembled according to the Decrees of Constance and Basil and these failing unto Jesus Christ In his own appellation he mentioneth the same and he si●teth the Bull or Letters that were sent unto the Senate Pius had said It is a vain thing to appeal unto a thing which is not and which cannot be above the Pope He answered The Councel was above Peter and as it may be appealed unto the See Apostolical when it vaketh so it may be appealed unto a future Councel ..... He dare call me an Heretick because I say The Councel of Christendom is above a Pope and I say he is an Heretick who maintaineth the contrary Pius had said A Councel is no where He answered The Pope hindreth no hindrance is on my part c. Theodor Faltrius writ in the name of Pius against Hemburgh and he answered by Apologia contra detractiones blasphemias Theodor In another Treatise De Primatu Papae which was Printed at Ba●il An. 1555. he calleth Rome Babylon and the Whore and he maintaineth that the Primacy of the Pope hath no ground in Scripture nor the writings of the Antients but is by usurpation only without the institution of Christ contrary to the good of the Church and an intolerable tyranny and he exhorteth every man to depart from Rome as they are commanded in the Revelation and to this effect he hath a comparison of Christ and the Pope to prove that the Pope is the Antichrist He accuseth the Teachers that for fear or hope they dare not contradict the Pope's errours and by their silence do confirm his usurped power In the end he saith These many years it hath been more safe to doubt and dispute of the power of God than of the power of the Pope for men being drunk with the Wine of this Whore do expound the Holy Scriptures flatteringly and wrest them all to confirm her errours And because Emperours and Princes either for ignorance or not reading or because they are miscarried with earthly pleasures do not see this they are brought into this bondage to beleeve as an Article of their faith that the Pope cannot err and may do on earth as he pleaseth and no man may say unto him What doest thou And the Pope may command the Angels Catal. test verit 31. France was not better pleased with Pope Pius he sent unto Lewis the XI saying If thou be an obedient Son why maintainest thou the Pragmatical Sanction Eugenius did admonish thee to forsake it because it is not according to God So did Nicolaus and Callistus tell thee it is a cause of many evils and discords in the Church and hitherto thou wouldest never hear the voice of the Church The King was a little moved by these Letters but the Parliament of Paris shewed unto him the utilities of the Sanction namely if it be abolished four incommodities shall insue 1. The confusion of all order in the Church 2. The impoverishing of the Subjects 3. The whole Kingdom shall be emptied of money 4. The subversion of all the Churches and they give instances at length This Commonefaction was divided into 89. Articles by John Cardinal Atrebaten and is extant among the works of P. Pithaeus saith P. Morn in Myster But Lewis was perswaded by the Pope's Letters to annual the Sanction yet the King's Attorney and many Bishops would not consent and the University did resist the Pope's Proctor and appealed unto the next General Councel They observed many inconveniences following upon the annulling of the Sanction within the space of four years The Parliament did present these inconveniences unto Charls the VIII with a new complaint against the abolishing of the Sanction as may be seen in Ph. Morn in Myster pag. 587. And Pope Leo the X. in the Lateran Councel Sess 10. in his Bull which beginneth Primitiva shews that the Prelates and Clergy of France would not obey the King's dissolution of the Sanction nor give ear unto the admonitions of five Popes and had cleaved fast unto the Sanction 32. Antonius de Rosellis was a famous Reader of the Laws at that time and writ several Treatises against the Popes The Authors of Index
craving in the name of their Masters that a Book written by a Frier John Falkenbergh containing notorious errours and heresies may be examined by the Councel or Commissioners of the Nations or else they protest de injuria and they appeal unto the next General Councel Pope Martin answered saying I will inviolably observe and no way violate whatsoever hath been done Conciliariter in this Councel and these I do ratifie and approve and no otherwise Then Cardinal Antonius proclaimed liberty of departing unto every one and in the name of the Almighty God and of his Apostles Peter and Paul and of Pope Martin the V. he gave unto every one there present a full remission of all their sins once in their lives if that every one within two moneths after the knowledge hereof shall seek the Indulgence in forma c. Here the Cardinal of Ostia said Placet and Augustine de Lance in the name of the Pope said Placet and so it is written but no mention of Sigismund's Placet because the Councel was dismissed against his will 5. According to the Decree at Constance Pope Martin sent his Legates to Papia An. 1424. to open the Councel few Bishops came thither and the Pest beginning the Councel with common consent was removed to Sena more Prelates came there Alfonso King of Arragon intending to purchase the Kingdom of Sicily sought by all means chiefly by giving gold saith Platina to procure the adjournying of the Councel and to restore Pope Benedict the XIII But Pope Martin disappointed him by dissolving the Councel and nothing was done but only the next Councel was appointed to be at Basil An. 1431. 6. The Councel at Basil was began December 14. An. 1431. by the Legate Julian Cardinal of Sancti Angeli by Commission granted first by Pope The Councel at Basil Martin and confirmed by the lately elected Pope Eugenius the IV. as it is written in Sess 1. The Emperour Sigismund was Protector thereof whilest he lived sometimes by his Deputy William Duke of Bavier as appeareth in Sess 7. and sometimes personally as in Sess 14. In Sess 1. they propounded their main purposes 1. The extirpation of Heresie namely of the Bohemians 2. The quenching of the Wars in Christendom 3. Because the Vineyard of Christ is overspread and as it were laid wast with huge numbers of Thistles and Weeds of Vices that these may now be pulled up and the Church Mark this ye who say that the Roman Church hath never erred may flourish again and bring forth the fruit of honesty But the particulars that were treated in it may be reduced to four chief heads to wit concerning the Bohemians the Greeks the authority of General Councels above the Pope and the Reformation of the Church So omitting the order of time and Sessions for the clearer and more compendious method I will shew what was done in those 1. In Sess 4. the Bohemians were summoned to appear and a Safe-conduct was sent unto them Three hundred of them some Civilians and some Ministers came and disputed upon these four Articles 1. All who would be saved should receive the Communion under both kinds 2. All civil government is by the Law of God forbidden unto the Clergy 3. The Preaching of the Word is free unto all men having once received Ordination and free in any place Aen. Sylvius hath not this parenthesis and the Epistle of the Bohemians directed unto all the faithfull in the year 1431. saith Per eos quorum interest 4. Open crimes and scandals should not be suffered no not for avoiding greater evil The Deputies were ordered by their Commission to debate these Articles and no other and they would admit no argument grounded upon any Authority except of the Scripture alone Therefore the Fathers of the Councel charged Cardinal Cusanus to fight them in their own field and he was not ashamed to say The Scriptures belong to the well of the Church and not to the essence or necessity thereof either in the beginning or continuance And The Gospel is known by the Church but not the Church by the Gospel The Bohemians replied Such was not the mind nor voice of the Primitive Church which did administrate the Eucharist and expound the Scriptures otherwise then they do now Cusan answered Let not this move you that at divers times the Rites of the Sacraments be divers or that the Scriptures are applied unto the times or understood diversly so that at one time they are expounded according to the universally current Rite and when the Rite is changed the sence is also changed .... because when the sentence of the Church is changed divine judgement is changed The dispute continued fifty daies in the end the Councel approved the last three Articles in some sence And in Sess 13. they granted that the first was according to Christ's institution but say they the Church hath otherwise ordained and practised for weighty causes Nevertheless they would grant this unto the Bohemians and Moravians not as the bill of divorcement was granted unto the Jews but as lawfull by the authority of Christ Jesus and of his true Spouse the Church and as healthfull and profitable unto them who receive worthily Io. Cochlaeus and Garranza have omitted this dispute and conclusion but they are written by Aen. Sylvius and his Epitomizer Orth. Gratius in Fascic rer expetend fol. 96. Then Anno 1438. the Bohemians did supplicate that by allowance of the Councel they might have the Divine Service namely the Gospel and the Epistles and the Creed read unto the people in the vulgar language as it had been in that Kingdom by long custom and permission of the Church And that the Fathers there present would be carefull of the Reformation of the Church both in head and members as it is most necessary for Christian Religion and hath been of a long time wished by all godly souls and as they themselves had propounded from the beginning Orth. Gratius saith Many things were advised and conceived but had many obstructions the enemy of mankind procuring so Nevertheless the Bohemians failed not in their hopes neither would they fail in their indeavours 2. The second head was concerning the Greeks in hearing their Embassadours whose golden Bull was dated in the year of the World 6944. indict 14. An. Ch. D. N. 1435. November 26. and sending Legates unto Constantinople they gave a Safe-conduct and for the place of their meeting the Greeks propounded that if the Latines would go unto Constantinople the Clergy of the East would assemble upon their own charges but if the Latines will have the Greeks coming into the West their coming should be upon the expences of the Latines and the place of their assembly should be Basil or Avenion or Sabaudia at the option of the Greeks When they had agreed on these particulars in Sess 24. and 25. with consent of Pope Eugenius afterwards he drew the Greeks from the Councel as follows 3. The
mean time information was brought from Venice and other places that Amurathes was gone to Constantinople with a Navy and the Emperour intreated the Pope to send two Ships to aid the Greeks The Pope refused unless they will consent unto the union After some days the Pope promised to send one into Venice to hire two Ships and the Emperour sent two Noble-men to hire more Ships but the Noble-men could never finde nor hear of the Pope's Servants there When the four moneths were past the Greeks crave a beginning of the Councel because the Pope delayed the Bishops of Ephesus and Heraclea despairing of any good success went to Venice intending home-wards but the Emperour sent and brought them again Then he hearing that others also had the same purpose did first motion that the Councel should be removed further from Venice for hindering their return neither after that would he impart his counsels unto the Bishops but he and the Patriarch when his sickness did permit consulted with the Pope October 6. began the first Session and the Greeks would have it first disputed Whether the word filioque was a late addition to clear this they produced the Books of the first seven oecumenial Councels The Latines alledged the seventh was for them and they produced an old Book where it was so written The Greeks said That Book should not be admitted since neither is it in any of their books neither had any of the Latine Doctours writing of that purpose ever made use of that Book The Latines alledged also the testimonies of some Latine Councels and Fathers The Greeks made no reckoning of these and said Since the General Councels had not that particle and had threatned a curse against all who added unto or changed the Creed the Latines should not have added it and therefore the Latines should now consent unto the blotting away of that addition The Latines replied It should first be considered whether it be true and so may justly be added The Greeks would not proceed untill that was first blotted away Three moneths was spent with this jangling and the Pope seeing that the Greeks would not yeild gave them not moneys according to condition and agreed with the Emperour to remove unto Florence The Greeks opposed the removing mightily especially the Patriarch being sick of a Quartan Ague But they must remove in the midst of January An. 1439. The cause of the removing was pretended to be for the Plague it was in the Town in the Summer and though many of the Latines died of it yet it infected no house of the Greeks but one and in the Winter was ceased When they began the Sessions the Emperour commanded the Greeks against their wills to proceed unto the second question both parties alledged testimonies of the Ancients and neither of them brought one Argument from Scripture and quarrelled against the pertinency or faithfulness in quotation The Pope and the Emperour resolved together to make a definitive sentence and for that effect to take another course to wit both parties should frame a draught and which of the two should please them both that should be subscribed The Greeks were unwilling and said unto the Emperour that they had experience how obstinate the Latines are and will not yeild in any thing and they cannot yeild to depart from what their Church had held in all ages The Latines brought their form of the Sentence unto the Emperour first and he called the Greeks unto his lodging and shewed them it They all refused it The Emperour required them to frame another and that did not please the Latines whose objections against the Greeks were 1. Seeing in the first words it is said Because we thought that the Latines hold that the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Son as from two principles ..... therefore we did abstain from the addition or exposition of the Creed and from communion with them and now when you finde contrary you should no more abstain from the addition or exposition We crave your Answer in this 2. You say that you have declared the Faith of the Latines we ask Whether you think this true and if you will accord in this 3. Declare your faith When you say The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father we demand of you to answer Whether he proceedeth eternally from the Father alone and not also from the Son 4. You say The holy Ghost is properly of the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we crave that you would clear this Whether you think that proper is to be of the same substance onely or proper that is having his essence eternally from the Son himself even as from the Father c. These objections were delivered unto the Emperour and he told the Greeks that he had received such but he neither gave them nor read them unto his Greeks And whereas onely twenty four had consented unto that form which was delivered and twelve had refused it now some of these twelve craved leave to return home the Emperour threatned them sharply for craving it Then thinking upon ways of excluding these dissenters from voicing he said None should subscribe the Acts of this Synod but only such as had subscribed in former General Councels For this cause he caused to bring the Books and there findeth that none had subscribed but Bishops and Abbots and so he commanded silence unto others or rather he freed us from speaking saith my Authour to wit against conscience Then the Emperour called them unto voicing ten were for the proceeding from the Son and seventeen were dissenters Wherefore the Emperour and the Patriarch dealt with the dissenters apart partly by allurements partly by expostulations of ingratitude for former benefits and partly by menacings and the Patriarch objected against the Abbots that they had received their titles from the Emperour yet they were not a● yet canonically ordained and the time being expired wherein they should have craved their confirmation their title is null On June 3. the Emperour called them together and propounded a form of union to be subscribed in these terms Seeing we have heard the testimonies both of the Eastern and Western holy Fathers and these say The holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Son and those say From the Father by the Son and that By the Son is one with that From the Son and that From the Son is one with that By the Son yet we forsaking that particle From the Son say That the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father by the Son eternally and essentially as from the same principle and cause the particle By there signifying the efficient in the proceeding of the holy Ghost Thirteen subscribed this among whom were the Patriarch and the two Deputies of Alexandria The Emperour required the Courtiers to subscribe who all obeyed except his own Brother Lastly he confirmed it with this addition in the end that the Greeks were not tied to put the addition into their Creed nor to
Court that they did violate all Concordata they reserve all the fattest Benefices unto the Cardinalls they without all order dispense expectative graces exact Annates without pitty measure indulgences according to their luxury multiply the exaction of tiths under pretense of Turkish war sell benefices and priesthoods indifferently to unable persons even to ignorants and draw all causes unto Rome Whole volums of such things are extant and were presented unto Emperours and Kings and they adjoined the necessary temedies especially in the years 1516 and 1517 as P. Mornay testifieth in Myster pa. 629 edit Salmu in fol. and when Orth. Gratious had declared the 109 Grievances of Germany he saith O if there were not more hundreds of such that are here mentioned by the Princes CAP. IV. Of BRITANNE 1. John Colet had learned humane sciences at home and went to France and Italy for love of the sacred Scriptures When he returned he set himself especially to the meditation of Paul's epistles and expounded them publickly and freely at Oxford Henry 7 promoted him to the Deanry of Paul's He professed to distaste many things that he had heard in Sorbone he called the Scotists men without judgement and the Thomists arrogant he said he reaped more fruit by the books which the Rabbies called hereticall than by their books that were full of divisions and definitions and weremost approved by them He never marryed and yet regarded not monks without learning he said he found no where lesse corrupt manners than among married persons because the care of a family and other affections suffered them not to deboard so much as others are wont He spoke zealously against bishops who professing religion were greatest worldlings and in stead of shepheards were wolves In his Sermons he said Images should not be worshipped and clerks should not be covetous Nor Christians willingly be warriours Two Friers Bricote and Standice accused him for heresy unto B. Richard Fiziames and he unto the archb first and then unto King Henry VIII but these two knowing the godliness of the man became his Patrones Erasm in epist ad Jod Jon. dated Andrelac Idi Jun. An. 1521. He died of a consumption An. 1519 in the 53 year of his age the clergy would have taken his body out of the grave and burned it if they had not been hindred by the King Foxe in acts mon. 2. Arthur the eldest son of King Henry I. married Catharine the Infanta of Spain and died without issue then his father being desirous to continue the alliance with Spain and to keep her rich dowry within the realme devised to marry this young widow to his other son Henry and for this end he purchased a dispensation from the Pope The King thought to have made his second son Archbishop of Canterbury and for this end was the more solicitous to have him well instructed but he was crowned after his fathers death An. 1509. 3. In the beginning of this Century was litle stirre in matters of religion in Scotland After that infortunate battel of Flowdon where King James 4 and his base son Alexander Archbishop of Saintandrews were slain fell great strife for that See Gawin douglas Bishop of Dunkell and brother to the Earle of Anguise was presented by the Queen as Regent Patrick hepburn Priour of Saintandrews was elected by the Chanons and Forman Bishop of Murray and Pope Julius his Legate would have it by his power of Eegation This strife was so hot and continued so long a time that the mouths of many were opened to speak against the corruptions in the Church 4. Hector Boece was borne at Dundy brought up in learning at Paris and at this time was professour of philosophy and afterward Principall of the Colledge at Aberdien In his Chronicle of Scotland he cometh not nearer than King Iames 2 but by the by he shewes the estate of the Church in his own time in Lib. 13. c. 11 he saith Now we will make a digression and see how farr the Prelats and Church men in antient times were above the Prelats of our times in vertues and integrity of conversation of which the Prelats now but have the name and follow not their manners at all for the antient fathers were given to the imitation of Christ in poverty piety humility and righteousnes alluring the people by their fervent charity and continuall preaching in the Service of God with equall affections to rich and poore not araying themselves with gold silver or costly ornaments not haunting the Court nor accompanied with women or seen in bordels not contending to exceed Princes in pleasure and insolency nor doing any thing by deceit but living in pure conscience and verity But the Prelats in our dayes and the Church-men are led with more vices than are seen in any other people such enormities have rung perpetually since riches were apprised by Church-men So farr he If the opposition be marked which is his aime we may understand what prelats or clergy were then CAP. V. Of COVNCELS 1. When Pope Julius 2 was crowned he promised by solemn oath to call a Generall Councell for Reformation of the Church but afterward no thing was lesse in his mind and while he made war now against Venice and then against France nothing regarding the estate of the Church nine Cardinals departed from him and having the concurrence of the Emperour and the King of France with their clergy a Councell was summoned on May 19 to conveen at Pisa Septemb. 1. An. 1511 because the Pope had violated his oath concerning the calling of a Councell and the condition of the Christian Commonwealth admitted no longer delay and they summoned the Pope to appear before them and all Princes Doctours and Prelats that had or might pretend any in terest through Italy France and Germany On August I. the Pope published his answer that when he was a Cardinal he was most desirous of a councell but now because of the warrs a councell can not be assembled in Italy and far lesse in the wasted and defaced City of Pisa nor had they authority to call a councell and therefore he commanded all men not to obey that citation under pain of excommunication Jo. Sleidan Comment Lib. 1. Three Cardinals returned unto the Pope and were accepted saith Nic. Basel in Addit but the others with the bb of Lombardy and France did meet at Pisa and because they were not safe there they removed to Millan where Barnardin Card. S. Crucis was chosen president and then fearing that Millain was not safe enough they removed to Lions Because they continued in their purpose the Pope in his Consistory at Rome condemned them as hereticks schismaticks and rebellious and depriveed them of their titles dignities voice bishopriks monasteries and whatsoever Benefices they had by Commenda or whatsoever other title and declareth them uncapable for al times to come Basel ib. In the mean time the Emperour was persuaded by the Pope to forsake that councell
too wealthy and their successours tooke more pleasure in their wealth then in their industry and piety and when wealth was severed from godliness they became proud and ambitious yet would not want the name of holiness and by the name of holiness with too much wealth they did climbe I will not say unto the highest pinacle of honour but unto Divine honour and were exalted above all that is called God and laid aside even the word of God So that then it might have been said Spernitur à Româ Scriptura novissima Dotum that is when the Romane Church had forsaken piety of conversation purity of worship order of discipline equity of Civill things and all graces or gifts of God lastly she despised the very written word of God Nevertheless God left not men inexcusable nor suffered He them to passe without reproofe by some Witnesses of his Truth even under the grossest darkness And so we have heard not only the Waldenses and such others which made separation from the Church of Rome as the Greeks but some Monks some Abbots some priests some Bishops some Universities some Counsels of States some Parliamens some Councels yea some Cardinals and Popes which were and did continue members of the Romane Church now and then bewailing and declaring the corrupt estate of the Church both in the pretented head and in the body thereof for the greatest part not only in manners rites and discipline but in doctrine also We have heard some professing a desire and attempting a Reformation but were ever hindered by the Popes and court of Rome How then can any man be so impudent if he be not altogether ignorant to say that the Church of Rome hath never erred nor can erre We have heard also some foretelling that a Reformation must bee and shall be yea and some pointing at the very time and year of Reformation We have seen the world prepared for a Reformation by store of antient books printed and spread through Europe by reviving of Liberall Sciences and the prime tongues and by multitude of learned men It followes now to behold how God Reformed his Church not by the direct intention of men but in spite of all his adversaries and as it pleased Him in wisdom for the manifesting of his glory and mercy toward ungratefull mankind PART II. CHAP. I. Of POPES HADRIAN VI. borne in Utrecht of Belgia for his learning and sagacity of judgement was called from Lovan to be Tutour unto Charls the young King of Spaine then he became Bishop of Derthuse and chief Counseller unto Charles and Governour of Spain in the Kings absence and at that time being known at Rome by report only he was chosen Pope January 9. An. 1522. When he was advertised of the election he wrote Letters of thanks unto the Colledge of Cardinals for the good opinion they had conceived of him and whereas three Cardinals were appointed to be sent unto him he desired them to spare their travell for as soone as it might possibly bee he would come unto Rome And because the Senate and people of Rome were displeased that a stranger should have that Dignity he wrote unto them promising whatsoever favour could be expected from him He arrived at Rome in August following In the mean time Soliman the Turk was besieging the isle Rodos And in the seventh moneth carryed it by composition to the great shame of Christians J. Sleidan Comment Lib. 3. adfin It appeares that from Spain Hadrian wrote unto Erasmus to write against Luther and accordingly in an epistle dat Basileae prid jd. Julii An. 1522. ad Jodoc President of the Senate of Mechline he saith Here and there partly by word and partly by epistles I have turned away many from the Lutheran faction and nothing hath discouraged the Lutherans minds so much as that I have openly declared my adherence unto the Romane high priest and disallowing Luthers cause Cheregat was sent with a Brieve as they speak dated Novemb 25. 1522. from Hadrian unto the Princes of Germany shewing that it was grievous unto him that Luther had moved such a stirre and sedition for it concerneth the loss of souls and the destruction of the flock now committed unto him and it is hapned to beginne in the same Country where he was borne which Nation was ever furthest from all supicion of heresy wherefore he craves earnestly that they would helpe to remedy it as quickly as might bee lest through longer delay it happen unto Germany as it did unto Bohem and he promiseth that he will spare neither mony nor travell here in beseeching them that they will every one according to his power do the like seing so many weighty causes may move them heerunto to wit the Glory of Gods holy Name is by this heresy chiefly obscured the rites of the Church are defaced and in a manner abolished and Germany which was wont to have the chief praise of religion now for this revolt cometh into contempt for when they might have easily dispatched Luther and quenched his heresies they have not done it so degenerating from their ancestours which have left a notable example of their vertue at Constance Is it not a most notorious wrong that Luther doth unto them and their forefathers for where as they have followed the religion of the Romane Church now when he condemned that religion he condemned them Let them weigh seriously what those fellowes do intend verily under pretence of Evangelical liberty to take away all Lawes and Magistrates Albeit first he seemes only to impugne the rulers of the Church as tyrannicall and wicked and hitherto they doe craftily hide their intention and traiterously and do flatter Magistrates to the end they may the more freely utter malice against the Clergy but when the clergy are opprest doubtless they will attempt further ..... Luther differeth not much from the sect of Mahomet which permits men to marry many wifes and then to forsake them by which means that wretched hypocrite hath bewitched and allured the greatest part of the world albeit Luther permits not this yet he aduiseth all men which have vowed chastity to marry so giving way unto mans lust that he may have the more to be of his confederacy to the utter destruction of the Commonwealth especially of Germany Therefore it is their part to put in execution the decrees of Pope Leo and of Caesar ...... If any will say Luther was condemned ere he was heard or it is reason the cause should be debated these men think amisse for Christ had taught us the rule of faith and religion whose authority we must follow and not skan the articles of faith by humane reason nor enquire the cause of this or that precept Indeed he is to be heard when he is examined whether he spake thus or thus whether he set forth this or that book but touching the faith and sacraments we may not permit him to dispute nor defend these things which he had written
hear that he had written of free-will and such other idle questions trifles and of the Sacrament and such other things that are determined by the generall Councels Osiand in Epit. Lib. 1. Cap. 27. In March Luther publishes his answer unto the Censure of Colen and Lovan These writings are reported at Rome and some do charge the Pope of negligence that he provideth not timely against so great evils especially the Monks do grumble that he takes more pleasure in hunting gaming and musik and is careless of weightier things they tell him how arianisme might have been prevented if Arius had been Contplaints at Rome against Leo he knowes not what to doe at h is first appearing put out of the way as they did at Constance with Huss and Jerom. On the other side saith Pe. Soave Leo began to repent that he had medled at all with the business for he thought it had been better for him to have permitted the Monks to fight together so long as they both professed obedience unto him and not to have sided with either party to the offense of the other yea if he had not medled with it it might have evanished in a short time Nevertheless upon the continuall solicitation of some bb of Germany and the two Universities and especially of the Friers Leo was moved to yield So the Cardd Prelates Divines and Canonists were assembled and Leo commits the cause unto them They unanimously agree that so great impiety must be blasted with the thunder of a curse but the Divines and Canonists do vary in the manner Some said the curse must be given peremptorily others say A citation must precede The Divines say The A decree against Luther case is notorious by his books and publik Sermons The Canonists say Notoriousnes takes not away just defense neither by the law of God nor of nature and they had given a precedent in summoning him before Cardinal Cajetan Again the Divines say This cause doth concerne them only seing it is of faith Religion The Canonists say It concerneth them also seing it is a case to be judged After much jangling they fall upon a course to please both parties and distinguish between the doctrine person books let his doctrine be presently condemned a certain day be named wherein he may appeare and that may serve for a citation but for the books there was another variance some would have them go with his doctrine and some with his person And when neither party would yeeld unto the other a mid way was devised to please them both to wit the Books shall be condemned with the doctrine and be burnt when he is accursed And accordingly one decree is made for all therein he is not warned to appeare but that he and all adhering unto him shall abstain from these errours and burn the books within 60 dayes or els they are presently declared notorious and obstinate hereticks and also all men are charged that they keep not nor receive any of his books howbeit they containe not the condemned errours but flee from him and all his favorits or take his person and bring him up or chase him out of their dominions yea and whosoever shall receive him their lands also are made subject unto the curse of the Church The forenamed authour shewes what were the censures of this Bull men of understanding saith he did admire it first in the forme that whereas it should have been handled in the language of Scripture yet it was set forth in the style of a Court and that in such intricate prolixe sentences that it was hard to find out the meaning of it and as if it were a decree in case of a fee-farme namely in that clause Forbidding all men that they presume not to assert these errours was such polixity that between forbidding and preserve were 400. words at the least Others did marke that unto 41. positions that were condemned as hereticall scandalous false offensive unto the godly and seductive of the simple it was not shewed which were Hereticall which scandalous which false but by adding a word respective all was made uncertaine seing that Generall word determineth not the particulars and therefore some prudence or other authority is necessary to define these controversies And some did admire with what face it could be said that among these 41 propos●tions some were the errours of the Greeks condemned long ago Others thought it strange that so many positions of severall heads of the faith were condemned at Rome by the sole pleasure of the Cardinals and other Courtiers without the knowledge and suffrages of bb Universities and other learned men through Europe Now hear from Abr. Schultet how it was accepted in Germany Eccius brought it to Lipsia Marinus Caracciola Hier. Aleander to Colen Eccius is flowted in Lipsia the Bull was not received in Bambergh because as they said it was not legally intimated the Rector of Erford by a publick program exhorts the Students if they see that Bull set up in any place to teare it in pieces and oppose themselves unto the enemies of Luther So when Eccius came to Erford the Students went against him in arms and they threw the Bull being torne into pieces into the water Ulrik Hutten a noble man of Franconia did publish the Bull with interlineary and marginall glosses not without great reproach to the Popes honour Luther before he saw it had set forth his book De captivitate Babylonica wherein he professeth that dayly he saw more and more and he wishes that all his books concerning Indulgences were burnt and in place of them all he sets this one position Indulgences are the wickednesses of Roman flatterers And he wishes that his books were burnt in which he had denied that Papacy is of divine right and had granted that it is of humane right and for them he sets this Thesis Papacy is the mighty hunting of the Romane Bishop Then he teaches that the captivity of the sacrament of the altar is first that one of the elements is denied unto the people 2. that transsubstantiation is believed 3. that the masse is made a sacrifice And he acknowledgeth but two sacraments baptisme and the Lords Supper and he willeth that this book be accounted a part of his recantation When he had read the Bull he said At last the Bull of Rome is come of which some write many things unto the Prince but I despise it and will set myself against it as impious and altogether Eccian yee see Christ is condemned in it there is no reason named I am called not unto audience but to a recantation ye may see they are furious blind and madd ..... O that Charles were a man and would for Christ's sake set himselfe against these devils Then he wrote against the Bull calling it execrable excommunicates the authors of it maintaines all the condemned articles calleth the Pope the Antichrist and appealeth from him unto a Councell When
mens souls are mortal The Printer is informed and addresseth himself to answer before the King and Counsel then they return unto Paris but he shewes how false their calumnies were At that time they sent unto the King 46. Articles which they had collected It was told unto their Deputies that they had spoken of some thousands of errours and were these all turned to 46. Their answer was The University had more but had not as yet put them in forme The Printer returnes to Paris and chides some of the Divines that they had accused him falsely They produce the place where they alledge he denieth the immortality of the soul He replieth They understand not Latine who will from these words forge such an errour And saith he I give them this praise that when they can not prevail in reason none are more impudent to bear down the innocent with monstrous lies Then he returns unto the Kings Court and petitioneth that his adversaries should plead their cause against him and bring-in all their articles When they were summoned to do so ten of them do compear and in their pleading they fall into variance among themselves and could not agree in maintaining their articles Then they were charged that hereafter they shall not usurp that power of Censure in matter of faith which belongs unto the Bishops unless the bb shall call for their advice The Articles were delivered unto the Cardinals and Bishops to be examined and it was appointed that their Censure be given unto the Printer to be printed The Deputies of the University do lament that their power was taken from them yet durst not speak in publick and the selling of the books was stopped untill the bb had given their censure The Deputies returning a publick thanksgiving was appointed as if all the business had been well done and they were confident that no more should be required of them The bb and Cardinals do conferre upon the 46. articles they say five or sixe were liable to misintetpretations but all the rest were sound and Catholick When the Printer heard it spoken so in the Court he presseth that the University should be charged to bring what other articls they have to object The King commandeth them once and again to bring all their accusations They delay thinking that if the bb had given such a censure of the 46. articls they can have little hope of any more Therefore they do alledge that they can not attend the Court in such a cause and they do supplicat that it be referred unto the Inquisitors The King not being present it was so concluded by the Councel The Printer was then afrayed because the Inquisitors must condem all whom the University condemneth Therefore he addresseth himself unto the King who in Councel causeth seal an Act suspending the former Act and commandeth the University to produce what other articles they had against the book Then they deal with Guiancurt the Kings Confessor that he would solicit the King to condem the Printer as an heretick and that they be not pressed to bring more articles and in the end of their Letter it was written It were a shame unto the University if a mechanick man shall prevaile against them The Confessor prevailes so that the selling of the books was again forbidden yet so that the University must produce their other Articls The Printer knowes not of this which was done by the King and he going unto Court gives thanks unto the Cardinal of Guise for his favour in the judgement of the articls The Card. telleth him The course was changed He askes is there no remedy I know none saith the Cardinal The Printer is feared and intendeth to leave the Countrey he communicats the case unto the Bishop Castellan and being betwixt fear and hope he entreats him to ask the King for what cause he had given order to persecut his Printer The King said It is true I have forbidden to sell the books because the Divines have complained of him as a most pestiferous heretick but not that he shall be banished untill they bring the rest of their articls Then the Divines deal with Senalis Bishop of Orange to persuade the Printer unto submission and the Bishop said unto him It were better for him to agree with the Divines than to leave his Countrey nor could he have any hope to prevail against the holy University He answereth I expect no victory but only let them obey the King and produce their articls The Bishop replieth That can not be expected seing it is not the custom that the University should prove what they do judge heresy but only shew by word of mouth and their word must be believed or els we could never come to an end of an action After a day or two the Printer saith unto the Bishop that he is willing to desist if the Divines will no more persue him and afterwards he shall print nothing without their advice The Bishop applaudeth the motion and adviseth him to communicat it unto Gujancurt The advise pleaseth him also if the Printer will give it in writ and he undertakes to send it unto the University The Printer considereth that if they had that under his hand he were no more safe from them and they might produce that as a sufficient reason why they should not bring-in the rest of their articles therefore herefuseth So both parties come again into ths Kings Court there it was reported that the Printer should have 1500. crowns for his damnage Then the Deputies do rage and say Shall a wicked man have a reward for impiety and so others shall be encouraged to do more mischief So the King was persuaded to give no money but he said unto his Printer that he will be more bountifull unto him another away The Printer gives the King humble thanks saying that he craved no more but that he would protect him from the malice of these his enemies The King granteth him his warrant but with difficulty could he obtain the seal and when he had it he keeps it quiet In the mean time the Divines endeavour to prove other things against him by witnesses and when it was told them that he had the Kings warrant they do use all means to have him imprisoned and will not believe that he had obtained a protection He shewes it unto them and then they demurre When this storm was over he gathereth fifetien old manuscripts of the New Testament in Greek and printeth it with the diverse lections on the margine and gives the first coppie unto Castellan he calleth the Printer sawcy that he had printed it before he had aduised with the Divines Robert answereth There can be no danger in printing that book nor could he be suspected of heresy for it yea and some of them had advised him to change the text in 1. Cor. 15. 51. Wee shall not all sleep but wee all shall be changed The Bishop said He should have done so for there
diverse men some of them are seditious and some are good and honest Men zealous and loyal unto God and their King and would in nothing offend the one nor the other in living and dying they shew their desire to enioy salvation and to find the way thereunto and when they have that way they fear not losse of life nor goods nor any manner of punishment As yet we see it plainly enough that the punishments which have been devised against them have done no good but rather their patience in the midst of firy flames hath stirred up many to love their cause whence it hath been that many who never knew of their doctrine were desirous to know it for which those had suffered and did embrace the same doctrine with no less affection and zeal Therefore look upon the examples of the Bishops in the first general Councels who never used any other weapons but the word of God against the Arrians and other heretiks And the Christian and good Emperours did use no severer punishment against the authours of these sects but bannishment As for those privy meetings they were alwaies forbidden and the king hath sufficiently provided against them by Edicts yet so that according to equity consideration may be of the time manner purpose and number of them who do meet lest the innocent be afflicted Then Charles Marillac Bishop of Vienna was bidden to speak and his advice was to this purpose There be two as it were main pillars of a kingdom exercise of Religion and the good will of the people The controversies of Religion in antient times were determined in general Councels but now there is no hope of a general Councel for two causes first it is not in our power that the Pope the Emperour and Kings will agree on the time place and manner of a Councell seeing there be so many questions for those circumstances And next as when a man is grieved by some dangerous sicknes he can not tarry for remote Physicians because of the uncertainty of their comeing So the present malady is grievous unto every part of the kingdom and there is small hope of forreign cure therefore we must have a Councel of our own Nation as it was before concluded and the King did promise the necessity of the miserable Church requires it as also the Kings credite and the decrees yet extant shew that our ancestours were wont to assemble every fifth year in a general Councel and the histories of this Nation shew that Councels were called in every kings time some from the whole Realm and some from the half or a Province one or more and it was seldome seen but from these some good ensued to the Reformation of doctrine or manners Let us not stick in this matter nor fear to be accused We have many sorrowfull examples to set before us which are forewarnings of sad desolations ensuing as the miserable condition of the Jewes Greeks Egyptians and Africans where the Church hath flourished but now scarcely have the name of a Church For those causes I think that we can delay no longer to call a Councell notwithstanding these things which the Pope objecteth as letts thereof And while this Councel or Parliament of the Church is in preparation I think three or four remedies may be provided 1. that Prelates abide in their Diocies and here he inveighes against the Italians who reap the gain or thrids of Benefices and have no care of the office 2. that nothing be done in the Church through Simony or bribes 3. to confesse out own faults unto God and make this manifest by publick fasts which was alwayes the custom of the Church in time of publick calamities and what greater danger can there be then that which slayeth mens souls 4. to stay seditious persons that they hinder not the common tranquillity and let it not be permitted upon any occasion whatsoever to rise in arms without the kings leave seing hereby have been many enormities on the one part we have seen the tumult of Amboife and on the other certain preachers have stirr'd up the people violently to destroy and bannish the Protestants Under pretence of godly Zeal so grievous offences followed on both sides ..... The other main point is to keep the people in due obedience and reverent estimation of their Soverain whereof I judge this to be the way If the complaints of the people be hearkned unto and convenient remedies be applied There is a great difference between privat and general grievances publick complaints should be heard in a publick assembly of the Estates and at this time the people complain of many things and when common complaints are not heard the hearts of people are commoved c. Thuan. hist lib. 25. The judgements of others were heard namely the Cardinals said Nothing can be done concerning a Councel without the Popes advice The Bishop of Valence said If the Parisians have need of water may they not bring it from Sene more easily then from Tiber. It was concluded Seing the present maladies require present remedies there should be a National Councel and on Aprile 11. it shall be called to assemble September 10 and an Oratour was sent with all possible speed to declare unto the Pope their necessity of a Councel and to entreat that he would take in good part what they had concluded But his travell was in vain-Soave in Conc. Triden lib. 5. At that time it was decreed also that the Estates should conveen at Orleance or where the King will please to appoint to advise of things to be propounded in the Councel and to the same end particular meetings should be in every Province and the Bishops should prepare themselves and in the mean while none should be troubled for religion unless they be found to take up arms seditiously and the punishment of such men to be reserved unto the King French Commentar lib. 2. Afterwards the Guises suggest unto the king that Antony king of Navar and his Brother the Prince of Condee had plotted a new couspiracy The king sent for them both and resolved to satisfy the Guises with their blood These two being guilty of nothing obey The Prince of Condee was imprisoned and a guard was set to attend the king of Navar. The Pope promiseth to call a general Councel therefore the National Councel was left off king Francis died Decemb. 15. in the 17. year of his age An. 1560. and so the Guises were disappointed In this kings time Emanuel Duke of VValdenses are persecuted in Savoy Savoy commanded the Waldenses of Lucern Angronia Perossa and Sanmartius to receive the Masse c. or he would punish them as rebels They sent a supplication and Confession of their faith professing that they believe all things contained in the old and new Testament and the faith in the Creed of the Apostles and of Nice and of Athahasius and the doctrine of the antient fathers so far as they agree with the Scriptures
a small number of men we must set the decrees of the antient and general councels and judgement of the approved fathers and specially we should give place to the testimonies of Scripture being expounded by the interpretation of the Church lest hereticks brag and say They alone have the Worde of God As for the other point If those words This is my body have not so greata force as they sound and seem to have why are they repeated by all the three Evangelists and by Saint Paul why did not the later Evangelists or the Apostle expound these words as the Sacramentaries do this is the minde of the Testator which should not be reiected this was the mind of all the antient fathers that not only the bread is given but the very body of Christ really He concludes with those words I will yeeld unto your opinion of the Sacrament except yee pointing unto the Ministers think that Jesus Christ in his flesh is not in this world from the time of his ascension and that he hath some other body then that which is visible and except ye think he is otherwise in the sacrament then in the Word if ye think it all one to put on Christ in baptisme and to eat his body and drink his blood and briefly that he is so in heaven that he is not also on the earth and that he is otherwise in the sacrament then he is in a myre And then abjuring all those dangerous opinions he exhorts the King and Queen to maintain the antient faith and protested in the name of the Prelats that they would live and die in defence of that Doctrine which he had declared All the clergy came before the King and Cardinal Turnon in their name protested again This was the Confession of their faith which they would seal with their blood and which the King should embrace and if these who are separated will not subscribe the same they should not be heard but be bannished and they crave most earnestly that the King would so do The Ministers were afraid that the King would not admit them at another day and therefore was the more earnest that the King would be pleased to hear a reply presently but that could not be obtained By supplication they procured continuation of the Conference but in a more private place where were the King and Queen and king of Navar the Prelats twelve Ministers and a few others Beza declared what the Church is and distinguished it according to the twofold calling then he spake of the Notes of the Church and of the succession and calling of Pastors in ordinary calling he said three things are necessary examination election and imposition of hands and in extraordinary calling it is lawfull by Gods authority albeit one or two or all these conditions be wanting as for working of miracles it is not alwayes conjoined with extraordinary calling unless we will talk of things whereof we have no testimony Then he spoke of the authority of the Church and whether it may err and he shewed out of the Cardinals words that the Church may err in particular members and congregations As for the general Councel he said Men have not the more learning that they become Commissioners and many times the Prelats of sound judgement have been absent and they who should have been most sound have been most corrupt as Bernard complained in his time and therefore the authority of the Scriptures is above the authority of the Church for which cause Augustin wrote unto Maximin the Arrian that he will not obiect the councel of Nice nor will have the councel of Arimino obiected against him but let the Scriptures be Judge for both And yet we despise not the judgement of councels and fathers if they agree with the Scriptures but as Jerom writes the errours of the antiens should not be followed but the authority of the Scriptures may never be despised I feare said he that I have been too prolixe and therefore lest I give offense I will continue or leave off to speak of the sacrament as it shall please your Royal Majesties The Cardinal beckned unto Claud. Espensius a Sorbonist he said He oft had wondred how the Ministers had entred into the Church seing they neither entred ordinarily by ordinary authority and imposition of hands nor by any extraordinary way seeing they are not confirmed by working of miracles nor by express testimony of Scripture and therefore their Ministry is not lawfull From that he turned to speak of the sacrament at the command of the Cardinal Lorrain that he might bring the Ministers into controversy with the Germans as was said To the same purpose spake a white Monk of Sorbon Xainctius but more despite fully against the Ministers and to the offence of both parties Beza complained of his impertinency and did supplicate the Queen that she would provide against reviling words and digressions then he said Our Ministers were chosen and approved by our own Churches and so have two parts of ordinary calling and if imposition of hands be wanting unto any the calling is lawfull because these two are the substantials and the other is less principal And in so great confusion of all things in the Roman Church we would not seek imposition of hands from them whose vices superstition and false doctrine we disallow for they be open enemies unto the Trueth as the Prophets had not such enemies then as the Priests neither sought they confirmation of their offices unto which God had called them Neither are miracles necessary in extraordinary calling as is manifest by examples yea Paul in evidencing his calling speaks not of miracles that he had wrought but of the fruits of his preaching the which wee also may say of so many Nations and Provinces which have received the Gospel by our preaching nor can there be a greater confirmation of any Ministery seeing the power of God is manifest in us which neither imprisonment nor banishment nor fire could hinder Espenseus said Bring mee one example in those 1500. years like to yours All things said Beza are not written that have been done and however it hath been it followes not that our calling is not manifest enough and set forth from God in his due time He is not now bringing a new Gospel but restoring the old which was sufficiently confirmed before and now by a singular way he hath caused his light to shine He spake also of traditions but was oft interrupted by Xainctius and the Cardinal fearing that his incivility were checked by the Queen would end the controversy as if the question had been sufficiently cleared and the Sorbonists spoke as if the victory had been on their side Then the Cardinal said in the name of the Prelates that they would proceed no further unless the question of the Sacrament were handled and then he asks the Ministers Whether they do embrance the Augustan Confession Here he playd the fox for if they denied
the Scripture requires This was by and by reported to the Bishop in words varying a little that a Bishop must be a preacher or els he is a dumbe dog He is sent for and said The reporters are manifest liars The reporters are called and they affirm that he had said so and they profer to bring more witnesses He still saith They are lya●● More witnesses are brought and many come to heare Then said Seton My Lord you may consider what eares these asses have they can not discern betwixt Paul Esaie Zacharie and Malachie and Frier Alex. Seton I said indeed Paul saith A Bishop should be a teacher Esa●e saith shepherds not feeding their flocks are dumbe● oggs Zacharie saith they are idle pastours and I declared what those have said and my Lord if you be not offended at them you can not be offended at mee therefore I say again these men are manifest lya●s which have reported that I called you or any other Bishop no Bishops but belly gods The Bishop was offended but durst not at that time proceed against him because he was learned bold and in favour with the King and his Confessour But he and his complices did judge it not expedient such a man to bee with the King and so they endeavoure to make him odious unto the King and call him an heretick The King did remember how in private confession the Frier had admonished him for his lusts of the flesh and loved no● such advice and said He knew more of that man than any of them and then subscribes their accusation and promiseth to follow their advice in punishing him and all of that sect Seton is informed of these things and fleeth to Berwick whence he wrote unto the King in this manner Most Gracious Soverain Lord under the Lord and King of all of whom only thy Highness and Majesty hath power and authority to exercize justice within thy realme under God who is King Lord of all realms and thy Seatons letter against the iniquity impiety usurpation of bb and his advice to the King Ma. and all mortall Kings are but servants unto that only immortall Prince Chr. Jesus .... It 's not unknown to thy gracious Highness how thy Mas. somtime servant Oratour and ever shall be to my lifes end is departed out of thy realme ..... but I believe the cause of my departing is unknown which only is Because the bb and churchmen of thy realme have heertofore had such authority over thy subjects that apparently they were rather King and thou the Subject which unjust regiment is of it self false and contrary to holy Scripture Thou art the King Master and they are thy subjects which is true and testified by the word of God And also because they will give no man of whatsoever degree whom they once call hereticks audience time nor place to speak and use defence which is against all lawe .... So that if I might have had audience and shewd my just defence .... I should never have fled .... albeit it had cost mee my life But because I believed that I could have no audience they are so great with thy Ma. I have departed not doubting but moved of God untill a better time that God illuminate thy Ma. even to give every man audience as thou shouldst mayst and art bound by the law of God who are accused to death And to certify thy Highness that these are not vain words here I offer me to come into thy realm again if thy Ma. will give mee audience and hear what I have for mee according to the word of God and cause any Bishop abbot frier or Secular which is most cunning some of them can not read their Matins who are made Judges of heresy to impugne mee by the law of God and if my part be found wrong thy Ma. being present and judge I refuse no pain .... and if I convince them by the law of God and that they have nothing to lay to my charge but the law of man and their own inuentions to uphold their own glory and pridefull life and dayly scourging thy poor subjects I refer myself unto thy Ma. as judge Whether he hath the victory that holds him at the law of God which can not fail nor be false or they that hold themselves at the law of man which is very oft plain contrary and therefore of necessity false for all thing contrary to verity which is Christ and his law is of necessity a ly And to witness that this comes of all my heart I shall remain at Berwick whil I shall have thy Mas. answer and shall without fail return having thy hand writing that I shall have audience and place to speak I desire no more whereof if I had been sure I should never have departed .... Pardon mee to say that which lieth to thy Mas. charge Thou art bound by the law of God albeit they ly and say It appertaines not to thy Ma. to intermedle with such matters to cause every man who in any case is accused of his life to have their just defense and their accusers produced according to their own law They do blinde thy Ma. eies that knowest nothing of thy law but if I prove not this out of their own law I offer mee to the death Thy Ma. therefore may learn by dayly experience seing they neither feare the King of heaven as their lives testifie neither Thee their natural Prince as their vsurped power in their actions shewes why thy Highness should be no longer blinded Thou mayst consider that they intend nothing else but only the upholding of their barded mules augmenting their insatiable avarice and continually overthrowing swallowing up thy poore subiects never preaching nor teaching out of the law of God as they should the ignorant people but contend who may be most high most rich and nearest thy Ma to put thy temporall Lords and Lieges out of thy Counsell favour who should bee and are most tender servants to thy Ma. in all time of need to the defense of Thee and thy Crown ...... Let thy Ma. take boldness and authority which thou hast of God and suffer not their cruell persecution to proceed without audience given to him who is accused ... and then no doubt thou shalt have thy subiects hearts and all that they can do in time of need tranquillity justice and policy and finally the kingdom of heaven May it please you to give a copy of this to the Clergy and keep the originall and thy Ma. shall have experience if I go against one word that I have spoken c. This Letter was delivered unto the King and it was read by many but no answer was returned and the man went into England and preached some years the gospell to the comfort of his hearers The histo of Reformat Others spoke also against the licenciousness of the Clergy that a new resolution was taken to burne moe A
God and triall thereof of whom wee have experience that they do minister truly according to the institution of our Saviour And now Madam the Bishop of Santandrews by the corrupt Counsell of most wicked and ungodly persons hath given forth his letters of summons against our Ministers to compear in Santandrews or otherwhere such day as he hath appointed in his letters the copy whereof being required was refused to underly the most corrupt ●udgement of them whose Counsell in this cause he doth most follow And knowing how dangerous a thing it is to enter under the judgement of enemies wee can not suffer them to enter under their hands nor to compeare before them unless they be accompanied with such as may be able to defend them from the violence and tyranny where of wee have now experience But to stop all tumults and other inconvenients that may thereby occurre wee most humbly offer ourselves and Ministers to come before your Grace and Counsell to abide tryall in all things that they have to lay unto the charge of us and our ministers according to the word of God Beseeching your Grace as you ought of duty and as you are placed of God above his people take our cause or rather the cause of God to be tryed most justly according to the holy Scriptures before yourself and put inhibition to the said Bishop to proceed further untill tryall be taken as said is Unto the which your Gr. shall find us at all times ready as shall please you to command and your Gr. good answer wee most humbly beseech Another step of the first publik Reformation in Scotland This supplication had no answer as they did expect Then the Counsell conveening they did agree to hazard their lives and estates in advancing the cause of Religion and after deliberation what were fittest first to do they conclude these articles 1. that in all parishes the Curate should be caused to read the prayers and Lessons of the old and new Testam on sundays and festivall days conform to the book of Common prayers and if the Curate be not qualified or refuse another shall be chosen to do the same 2. preaching and interpretation of Scriptures shall be used only in private houses after a quiet manner untill God shall move the Queen to grant further liberty It was performed accordingly in many towns and parishes to the great offense of the clergy who complain unto the Regent and were answered that it is no fit time to enter into these matters but ere long she wil find occasion to put order unto them Archbald Earle of Argile had been in the Councell at the making of these Acts and the Bishop of Santandrews sent a letter unto him shewing the perill whereinto he casts himself by that open defection from the Church willing him to rid himself of that defamed and perjured Apostat John douglas whom the Earle had chosen to be his Minister and offering to provide unto him a learned and wise Preacher for whom he would lay his soule in pawne that he shall teach no other but true doctrine and agreeable to the Catholick faith The Earle answered he feared no perill to himself nor his house having resolved to live in obedience to his Prince and to serve God al●well as he could according to his word as for the alledged defection seing it hath pleased God to open his eies and give him the knowledge of his truth which he takes as a token of his favour he will not forsake it for fear of any inconvenients and that man he had named he had heard him teach the doctrin of Christ condemne idolatry adultery fornication and the like vices as he is ready to give account whensoever he shal he cited but to call him defamed and perjured there was no reason seing he was not declared to be such by any Sentence and if formerly he had taken any unlawfull oath he had done much better in forsaking it than if he had observed it and whereas he had profered unto him some learned man he gave him thanks seing is so great necessity of labourers in the Lord's harvest but he understood his meaning and minded not to be led with such teachers In end he wished he would not beginne the battell with him whereof the event may be doubtfull but that he knew God is God and shall bee still whatsoever the craft of man can work or devise The Bishop receiving this answer communicates it unto the chief of the clergy who began to think upon other defenses and they summon some Ministers to compear at Edinburgh the 20 of July especially Paul meffan Preacher 〈…〉 So many people did conveen that the Bishops thought best ●●●delay all process except that they condemned the absents and summoned them to compear on September 1. with promise of pardon if they will recant their errours Buchan hist lib. 16. The feast of S. Giles was then approaching for the custom was on Septemb. 1. to carry the image of their Pa●●●●-Saint through the town with drums trumpets and other musicall instruments and to envite nighbours unto feasting and great drinking At that time the Clergy did entreat the Regent to honour the solemnity with her presence and she fearing some tumult consents to accompany the procession but when the time of solemnity was come the image could not be found This made a stay till another little image was brought from the Gray Fri●rs the people in mockery called it young S. Giles They go-on with this and the Regent went with them till the procession was nigh ended So soon as she went to dinner some young men drew neer making shew to help the bearers and perceiving by the motion the image was fixed to the Fertor they threw all to the ground then taking the image by the heels they dash it against the stones untill they break it into pieces the priests and friers runne away to make shew of violence but when no danger did appeare they come to the striet again And albeit the clergy were out of all hope to stand yet to put the fairest face on their condition they conveen and delay their censuring untill November 7. In the mean time who were most foreward for Reformation went through out the Shires exhorting all men to take the Reformation to heart and that they would not suffer themselves nor friends to be oppressed by a few priests and assuring them of victory if the cause be handled legally or if violence be vsed they shall not be inferiour Vnto so many who were willing they offered a bonde to subscribe which they had drawn up conforme to the act of the Councell The subscribers were called The Congregation which name became more famous In November a Parliament for articles of the marriage betwixt Francis Daulphin of France and Queen Mary was to be conveened then they knowing by the return of the subscriptions that the Countrie for the most part was enclined that way resolve to make
and the man made the matter so plain that all doubt was removed Then those Judges for this odious crime did deprive him of all function within the Church of Scotland and for his contumacy in not appearing before them did excommunicat him The author of the The Histor of Reformat saith this is recorded not only for a warning example unto others but likewise that the world may see what difference is betwixt the Church of God and the Romish Church seeing many of their Bishops and Priests yea and Popes are known to be guilty in such crimes and no way censured XVI The Papists at Easter An. 1563. began to say Masse more boldly than before namely John Hamilton Bishop of Santandrews the Prior 1563. Masse is practised of Whithern and many other priests monks This was offensive to many and therefore the Shirefs and others which had civill power especially in the West parts resolve that they will not complain to the Queen nor Counsell but execute former proclamations against the sayers of Masse and so some priests in the West were apprehended The Queen The Queē conferrech a I. Knox. was offended and sent for John Knox to come to her in Lochlevin and dealt with him that he would persuad the people and especially the Gentle men of the West Country not to punish any man for using what Religion they please John answereth If her Ma. would punish malefactors according to the lawes he could promise quietness upon the part of all which professe the Lord Jesus within Scotland but if she thought to delude the lawes he feareth some will let the Papists understand that they shall not be suffered to offend Gods Majesty without punishment When ●he Queen heard these and other words to this purpose she takes another course and directes summons against Masse-mongers in the straitest form with expedition to compeare on May 19 one day before the Parliament The Bishop of Santandrews the before named Prior the Parson of Saucher and others do compear At first the Bishop refuseth to answer before Civill Judges yet in end they all come into the Queens will and She designes them to severall prisons Then said some See what the Queen hath done the like was never done within this realm we doubt not but all shall be well Others fore spake things as it came to passe that it was but deceit and so soon as the Parliament is ended the Papists will be set at liberty and therefore advised the Nobility that they be not abused Many had their private business to procure in the Parliament especially the Act of oblivion and they said They might not urge the Queen at that time for if they did so she will hold no Parliament and what then may become of them and their friends but let this Parliament passe over whensoever the Queen craves any thing as She must do before her marriage Religion shall be the first thing that shall be established Much was spoken against A Parliament that politicall delay but in vain An act of oblivion was past of all things done in the publick cause from the year 1558. till September 1. in the year 1561 Manses and gliebs were appointed for Ministers adultery to be punished with death of both persons but nothing for establishing of admonition unto the Nobility Religion In time of this Parliament John Knox said in a Sermon before ma●y of the Nobility and other members My Lords I praise my God throgh Jesus Christ that in your presence I may powr forth the sorow of my heart yea yourselves shall be witnesses if I make any ly in things by past from the beginning of Gods mighty works within this realm I have been with you in your most desperat tentations ask your own consciences and let them answer before God if that I not I but Gods Spirit by mee in your greatest extremity willed you not ever to depend upon your God and in his name promised unto you victory preservation from your enemies if yee would depend upon his protection and prefer his glory before your lives and wordly commodities in your most extreme dangers I have been with you Santiohnston Couper-moore and the charges of Edinburgh are yet recent in my heart yea that dark and dolorous night when all you my Lords with shame fear left this town is yet in my mind and God forbid that ever I forget it What was my exhortation unto you and what is fallen in vain of all that ever God promised unto you by my mouth yee yourselves live and testify There is not one of you against whom death destruction was threatned perished in that danger and how many of your enemies hath God plagued before your eies shall this be the thankfulness that yee shall render unto your God to betray his cause when yee have it in your hands to establish it as you please Yee say The Queen will not agree with us Ask yee of her what by Gods word yee may justly require and if She will not agree with you in God you are not bound to agree with her in the devill Let her plainly understand so far of your mindes and steal not from your former stoutnes in God and he will prosper you in your enterprises But I can see nothing but a recooling from Christ Jesus that the man that first and most speedily fleeth from Christs Ensigne holdes himself most happy Yea I hear some say that we have nothing of our Religion established by law nor Parliament albeit the malicious words of such can neither hurt he trueth of God nor yet us that thereupon depend yet the speaker of this treason committed against God and against this poor common wealth deserves the gallowes for our Religion being commanded and so established by God is received within this realm in publick Parliament And if they will say It was no Parliament we must and will say and also prove that Parliament was al 's lawfull a Parliament as ever any that passed before it in this realm I say If the King then living was King and the Queen now in this realm be lawfull Queen that Parliament can not be denied And now my Lords to put an end to all I hear of the Queens marriage Dukes Brethren to Emperours and Kings strive all for the best gain But this my Lords will I say note the day and beare witnes hereafter Whensoever the Nobility of Scotland who professe the Lord Jesus consents that an infidell and all Papists are infidels shall be Head to our Soverain ye do so far as in you lieth to banish Christ Iesus from this realm yea to bring Gods vengeance upon the Country a plague upon yourselves and possibly yee shall do small confort to your Soveraigne This manner of speaking saith the History of Reformation was judged intolerable both Papists and Protestants were offended at it and some posted to give the Queen advertisement that Knox had spoken against her
wee must for both thirds and two parts are rigorously taken from us a●d our tenants One said if others will follow my Counsell the Guard and the Papists shall complain al 's long as the Ministers have done Then the former sharpness was coloured and the speaker alledgeth that he meaneth not of all Ministers Christopher goodman an English answereth My Lord Secretary if you can shew what just tittle either the Queen hath to the third or the Papists to the two parts then I think I could resolve whither she be debtour to Ministers within burgh or not The Secretary replieth Ne sit peregrinus curiosus in aliena Republica Goodman answereth Albeit I be a stranger in your policy yet I am not so in the Church of God and therefore the care doth no less appertain unto mee here than if I were in the midst of England The Hist of Reformation Lib. cit This debate was because the Popish prelates were permitted to enjoy their tyths enduring their life so that a competent stipend were provided unto the Ministers and when the Queen returned home at the demand of the Counsell the Prelats condescended to quite the third part of the tyths for entertainment of the Queen's family and the provision of Ministers but the Guard received the thirds and gave nothing or little unto Ministers and they had oft complained of their want In all these quick reasonings I. Knox spoke not a word but thereafter he said I have traveled Right honourable and beloved Brethren since my last returning into this realm in an upright conscience before my God seeking nothing more as he is witnes than the advancement of his glory and the stabillty of his Church within this realm and of late dayes I have been accused as a seditious man and as one that usurpes to myself power that becomes mee not true it is I have given advertisement to the Brethren in diverse quarters of the extremity intended against the faithfull for looking to a priest going to Masse and for observing those that transgresse against just laws but that here in I have usurped further power than was given mee till that by you I be condemned I utte●ly deny for I say by you that is by the Generall Assembly I have all just power to advertise the brethren from time totime of dangers appearing as I have powr to preach the word of God in the pulpit of Edinburgh for by you was I appointed unto the one as unto the other and therefore in the name of God I crave your judgements the danger that appeared unto mee in my accusation was not so fearfull as the words that came to my ears were dolorous to my heart for these words were plainly spoken and that by some Protestants What can the Pope do more than to send forth his letters and require them to be obeied Let mee have your judgements therefore whither I have usurped any power to myself or If I have obeied your commandement Ibid. John Knox is removed and then the Lord Lindsay the Lairds of Kilwood Abbotshall Cuninghamheed the Superintendents of Anguise Fife Lothian West and Galloway Mrs John Row W. Christeson Ro. Hamilton Chri. goodman with the most part of the assembly did declare that they remember very well that Jo. Knox would have had himselfe exonered of the foresaid charge and that the Church at that time would not suffer him to refuse it but that he should continue as before to advertise from time to time as occasion shall be given An extract of the Acts of tbe nationall assemblies 3. The Noble men and Barons present do finally consent that for their own parts the tenants or labourers of the ground shall have their own tyths upon composition 4 It was thought needfull for confirmation of the book of discipline that certain commissioners or any three or four of them shall revise it and consider diligently the contents thereof noting their judgements in write and reporte the same unto the next assembly or if any Parliament shall interveen they shall report their judgements unto the Lords of the Articles 5. All Ministers and Readers having Manses at their Churches shall make residence there 6. Concerning Thomas duncanson who was Schoolmaster and Reader in Sterlin and having committed fornication had made publick repentance it was ordained that he shall abstain from that office in the Church untill the Church of Sterlin make request for him unto the Superintendents and he shall marry the woman if she require it 7. Alexander Jardin Minister at Kilspindy having committed fornication and therefore suspended by the Superintendent of Fife and thereafter had made publick repentance and married the same woman Is again suspended from all function in the Ministery untill the next Assembly and then to receive his answere 8. Commission was given unto five Ministers to take cognition of a complaint given by the Superintendent of Fife against Ge. Lesly Minister at Stramiglo and to decide therein and to notify their Sentence unto the Superintendent of Anguise In this year by past was great death and dearth through all the Country that the prices of corne and flesh was triple above the custom The writer of The Histo of Reformotion saith God did so according to the threatning in the law punish our ingratitude that suffered them to defile the Land with that abomination that he had so potently purged by the power of his word and for the riotous feasting both in City and country but alas who lookes to the true cause of our calamity Likewise in the winter following fell great rain which in the falling freezed so vehemently that the earth was but a shot of ice the fowls both great small could not flee but freezed and died and some were layd by the fire that their feathers might dissolve This frost is said to have been in January An. 1563. to wit according to the old account which was not changed in Scotland untill the year 1600. and then was changed but continueth in England untill the year 1660. CHAP. ● Of COVNCELS I. IT hath been shewd with what difficulty the Councel was called to Trents the History of it is most exquisitly penned by Petro Soave a Venetian The opening of Councel of Trent and translated into sundry languages here I add a compend faithfully and plainly in so far as concerneth the mannaging the Articles of doctrin for the most part When Pope Paul could no longer decline the calling of this councel as is before in the beginning of the year 1545. he sent three Legats John Maria de Monte a Card. Bishop of Palestina Marcellus Cervinus a priest Cardinall de Sancta Cruce and Reginald Pool a deacon Cardinal of S. Mary in Cosmedin with a Breve of legation but no particular instruction being as yet uncertain what commission to give them and intending to dispose as occasions namely the affairs of the Emperour shall require When the Legates were gone he consults the Cardinals what faculty is
but serious for their antient liberties and therefore was hated by the Duke and Philip Montmerency Count of Horn a zealous Reformer compeared in the Parliament trusting to the proclamed safeconduct and both were beheaded at Brussels without any regard of their former services to the King French Common Lib. 7. It were longsom to repeat what cruelties d'Alva shewd in spoiling burning hanging heading hacking racking and most horribly torturing without respect of age sexe or condition In the space of sixe years he is said to have put to death 18600. persons by the hands of hangmen besides all other his Barbarity He despised all ordinary Judges and jurisdictions even howbeit many and earnest sollicitations were put up in that behalf He and his Spanish Shouldiers abused women young and old some to death He pulled the skins off some being alive and headed the drums with them He caused some bodies be taken out of their graves and caused bury them under gibets because as he said they had died without shriving to the end he might pretend rig●t unto their goods he compelled the wife 's of them who were fled to marry his Souldiers In a word what is there under heaven so holy or honest which he defiled not what barbarous cruelty practized he not as afterwards was published in a Supplication unto the King and is extant being printed at London An. 157● with the French Commentaries For those causes the States of the Netherlands began to take Arms against that Duke in the year 1568. and they choosed William Prince of Orange to be their General he levied an Army of Germanes and Netherlanders Mons Genly brought unto him some Companies of Frenches out of Picardy then passing the River at Mentz he lingred some months only skirmishing now and then with the Duk 's souldiers yet taking some s●al towns In November he passed by the way of Liege to join with the Prince of Condee in Picardy with litle success Ibid. Lib. 8. Then d'Alva raised a great Army boasting to extinguish all the Reformed Lewes Count of Nassaw and Brother of William gaue battell unto the Spanjards near Groning in Friseland dispersed them and slew their Commander John Count o● Arnebergh Adolph a third Brother died in another fight Then d'Alva raged the more against the Reformers and most cruelly put to deat● Gisebert and Theodor Battemburges two Brothers of an antient family and other sixtien Gentle men with them he layd new tributes on the people he devised new torments and every where horrible murders were seen especially at Torna and Valentia Wherefore the people did flock unto the Prince of Orange Albeit at the first he had hard luck yet when d'Alva required of every Master of a family within the Provinces the tenth penny from each merchant the twenty penny and of all the landes and houses when they were sold the hundred penny to wit in the year 1570. the warrs seemed but to begin and more people joyned with the Prince especially all Holland and Zeeland and the F●ssiners took the Spainish Navy coming from the West-Indies in the year 1572. d'Alva accuseth them of rebellion against the King and of blasphemy against God and did write so unto the King VVhen the Reformed knew of that Letter they wrote the Supplication whereof I spake before An. 1573. wherein they protest that whatsoever was done they had not attempted it for any disloyalty unto the King their lawfull Superior but to defend themselves against the cruell oppression of the bloody Tyrant d'Alva and they humbly beseech the King to call to minde how those Countries were formerly divided among so many Lords and Rulers and afterwards by marriages mutuall treaties and lawfull successions they came under one house of Burgundy and now they are come under Spain yet always with express condition that each of those Provinces and Republicks should still enjoy their former liberties and none of them should be burdened with the dominion of another but live joyntly together under one Prince as so many children in their fathers house under one father for verification of this they put him in mind of his own entrance among others how his Father Charles V. caused him according to the accustomed solemnization repeat and confirm by oath the same priviledges which he had also renewed in a common Assembly when he received the government but now say they they are robbed of their rights and liberties yea horribly oppressed by a stranger a Tyrant an Herod a Nero c. and they name many of his oppressions in the end they humbly beseech him for Gods sake to bowe his ears unto their just complaint and they profess that they desire not to be dissolved from the obedience of his Majesty but only that they may have consciences free unto God to hear his worde as they must give accounpt at the day of judgement and to suffer the Countries enjoy their former liberties customs as he had promised by oath and if he will be so gracious unto them they promise to lay down their weapons and to hazard their lifes and goods in his service by sea or lande c. This their Supplication they caused to be printed in Latine Dutch and English The same year Philip called home Duke d'Alva either because he did not allow his cruelty or because he did not prosper in the warres but he despised their supplication and made no accounpt of their power nor confederat help saying VVhat can those mice do So the States obtaining neither civil liberty nor of Religion did refuse all obedience unto the King of Spain they put down all the power of the Bishops and resolve to defend themselves At the first they stamped their coin with a leash about a lions neck and a mouse between his feet with this circumscription Rosis leonem loris mus liberat meaning that their poor power would set religion of the Tribe of Judah at liberty and alluding unto that contemptuous word of King Philip. The first Union of the Provinces for government was between Holland and Zeeland in the year 1576. Aprile 15. and concerning Religion the Article was thus His Excellence shall admit and maintain the exercise of the Reformed Euangelical Religion and shal cause the exercise of all other Religions that are contrary unto the Gospell to surcease and leave off excep that his Excellency should not permit any inquisition upon any mans belieff or conscience or that therefore any trouble injury or impediment should be done unto any Afterwards five other Provinces joyned with them and in the year 1579. at Utrecht was the Generall Union of the seven in which the Article concerning Religion is thus As for the permitting or not permitting the exercise of Religion unto them who are different from the Reformed let every Jurisdiction decern according to their own pleasure and custom but all should grant liberty of Religion and of conscience unto every man and for that cause persecute and trouble
answered Seeing those have accused us of horrible errors we can not conceive how we can acknowledge them as brethren as for invectives we approve them not but we will oppugne their errors Beza said Seeing yee refuse us to give us the right hand of fraternity neither acknowledge us as brethren wee do not regard your hand of friendship So the Conference was ended March 29. Lu. Osian Cent. 16. lib. 4. IX In February An. 1589. Pistorius a Papist in Baden vanted that he The conference at Baden would confound all the Lutheran Divines and convince them by the Scriptures only and by the same ground maintain the Roman Religion No other Papist had attempted so much before But when James Marques of Baden had obtained from Lewes Duke of Wurtembergh some of the Divines there should come unto a Conference Pistorius shifted from day to day untill November Then the Marques and Frederik Duke of Mompelgart with consent of both parties set down the order and conditions of the dispute and especially to handle in the first place the question Whether the Lutheran or the Roman be the Catholik Church Both parties gave their Theses concerning that but in all the four Sessions Pistorius brought not one argument from the Scriptures he insisted only in discussing the ambiguity of words and sought to find captious sophisms at last against the will of the Noble men and of his adversary party he break off the Conference neither was any thing remarkable in that dispute saith Osiander Lib. Cit. but their Theses may be desired Pistorius said The Church ever was is and shall be conspicuous so that it can never be extinguisht nor obscured nor lurk nor be silent Though the notes of the Church be four to wit unity holiness perpetuity and universality yet all may be reduced into one for vniver sality is the absolute note of the Church As error can not be the signe of the false Church so purity of the word and sacraments whether in whole or in part can not be the mark of the true Church because purity depends on the Church rather then it upon purity and purity is known better by the Scripture On the other side the above named Iacob Andreae said The Church on earth is one in all times and places and the Scripture shewes clearly that the Church hath not one and alike face in all ages and places for it had one face in the dayes of the Apostles when she was most pure because by faith she kept the doctrine of Christ albeit her chastity was even then tempted by false teachers and she had another face when she was governed by the Fathers the successors of the Apostles for by lapse of time some errors creept-in as the Apostles had foretold The third and most miserable face was under Antichrist of which estate Christ and his Apostles had forewarned diligently then was the Church so deformed that she could scarcely be known as the Prophet said of the Jewish Church How is the faithfull city become an harlot ... neuertheless even then the Lord had his 7000. who had not defiled them selves with idolatry And because before the glorious coming of the Lord the Holy Ghost hath foretold that the man of sin shall be reveeled and killed in the hearts of many men he foretelleth another and a fourth face of the Church which is answerable unto the first in time of the Apostles And albeit Satan will by fanaticall spirits defile her no less them he did at the first and the number of the elect shall be small as Christ saith When the son of man shall come shall he find faith on the earth nevertheless the true Church shall continue in despite of al the craft of Satan untill the last judgement-day It is sufficient to prove the true Church to be Catholik now whether a particulare or uniuersal if it be demonstred oy the Prophets and Apostles or by their writings that she is conform in doctrine unto her which was in the dayes of the Apostles Neither is the purity of doctrine and Sacraments better known by the Church then the Church is known by the doctrin and sacraments for the Church depends on the word and Sacraments but the purity of doctrin and Sacraments depends on God only and his reveeled will even albeit all the world forsakeit speak against it as it is written All men are liars but God is true c. X. At Kracow An 1591. on the Ascension-day the Popish party especialthe Troubles in Poland Students being stirred up by their Masters the Iesuits began with a huge tumult to pull down the houses wherein the reformed were wont to assemble The King Sigismund and the Nobility being in the town sent some of the Guard to hinder them and stayd them for a time nevertheless at midnight those did gather again and burnt the houses wholly The Nobility of the nearest Provinces called this a beginning of the Massacre of Paris and fearing greater danger did meet in Chimiolinscia they resolve first to send unto the king and excuse them selves that they had assembled without his knowledge and to shew that their main b●siness was to Provide for his safty and honor agnaist the like tumults and that they intend to have a more frequent meeting September 23. in Radom where the Nobility of Lithvania professing the gospell will be present and to supplicat that the churches might be restored unto the Reformed in Cracow and that a Parliament might be called to establish peace of religion The King shew his displeasure for that they had assembled without his knowledge seing he had al ready promised unto the Messingers of Sendomiria and Cracow that he would vse all the means of Peace and to punish the authors and chief actors of that tumult and he dischargeth that other meeting he gave them liberty to rebuild the churches In the year 1595. was a more frequent covenntion of the Reformed or Euangelici as they The agree ment of the Resormed there called them selves at Torun in August there were two Palatini the Deputies of five others two Castellani and many Nobles of Poland and Lithuania and fourty four Divines After prayer they choosed Swietoslaus Otzelsci to be president a Marshal and Scribes Otzelsci declared the causes of their assembly 1. to advise how to preserve a consent in doctrine as it had been agreed by their fathers in Sendemiria And 2. because they are obnoxious unto the malice and violence of adversaries to consult how to preserve peace of religion as both present King and the former Kings havesworn to continue it When this was propounded the Deputies of the absent Palatini as also of the Senators of Volhinia Russia Podolia and Podlassia declared the excuses of their Authors and their desire of the same particulares A Messinger in the Kings name forbids them to sit any more They answer They intend nothing against the King nor Kingdom nor the lawes or constitutions
alswell in time past as henceforth may be punished according to these lawes especially the contemners of the lawes in Aberdien Cars of Gourie and other places as shall be specified When the Noble men heard these articles they said they thought it not convenient to propound them in that manner but rather they would collect them into two heads thus First they would declare unto her Majesty the good mindes and obedience of them there assembled and as for religion seing it concerneth the said Lords most especially being members of the Church they would deale with her Majesty that the same may be observed according to the Order established at her Highness arrivall And they say they doubt not but they shall obtain so gracious answer from her Majesty as may satisfy the assembly And concerning the sustentation of the Ministers they will likewise deale for it and they hope that they shall be reasonably satisfied Thereafter the same Lords declare how they were not only accepted by her Majesty in good part but that shee had accorded to the performance of the petitions and they promise in her Majesties name unto the assembly the accomplishment For said they if they were not persuaded in their hearts that her Majesty meant sinceerly they would not have been messingers of her answer On the other side all the assembly thank God and her Majesty that their reasonable petitions were so graciously answered and they desire the same Lords reciprocally to promise unto her Majesty in their behalfe all dutifull obedience love and submission which can be expected by any Christian Prince of most faithfull and humble subjects Promising also that if any of their number shall happen to forget the duty of a good subject in offending against her Majesties lawes they all shall concurr ingenuously to the punition of the offender according to the quality of the trespasse and as they shall be required Item concerning the jurisdiction of the Church the assembly nameth four Superintendents Elleven Ministers and four Gentle men to conveen the morn and conferr on the causes and jurisdiction pertaining unto the Church and report their opinions Item it is concluded that a Minister being once placed may not leave that congregation without the knowledge of the flock and consent of the Superintendent or wholl Church and his cause be considered whither lawfull or not Item it is decerned that Pa. Cowston shall not leave his congregation nor go out of the country even albeit he petitioneth it for a time to augment his knowledge Item whereas the Commissioner of Murray had complained on Wi. Sutherland parson of Moy that he had committed fornication and when he was charged to marry the woman he had despitefully torn the Commissioners letters whereupon he was charged to compear before this assembly and hath not come the Assemblie deprives him of all ecclesiasticall function and ordaines the Commissioner to proceed with censures against him for his contempt On Decemb. 13. was a Parliam at Edinb But saith the Hist of Refor the Queen would not cause proclame the Parliament untill she had desired the Earle of Murray by whose means chiefly the Earle of Lennox came into Scotland and was then to be restored that there shall no word be spoken in the Parliament or at least nothing concluded concerning Religion But he answered He could not promise it Some articles were then presented by the Commissioners of the Church especially for abolishing the Masse and punishment of vice but nothing was granted excep that it was statute a hat scandalous livers shall be punished first by prison and then publickly shewed unto the people with ignominy But this was not put in execution The Nationall assembly The VIII Nationall Assembly conveenes at Edinburgh Decemb. 25. Jo. Erskin Superintendent is chosen Moderator It is ordained that the publick affairs shall first in order be treated and then particulars shal be propounded in writ and if any persons cause requires hasty resolution it shall be dispatched in this assembly or els it shall be referred unto the Superintendent of the bounds and certain Ministers to examine it and put their judgement in writ which shall be reported unto the next assemblie 2. The assemblie causeth propounde unto the Lords of Secret Counsell the articles following and humbly require their H. H. to solicite the Queens Majesty for answer 1. To signifie that the transgressors of the proclamations that have been against the sayers and hearers of Masse and the abusers of the sacraments are so common that it may be greatly feared that judgements shall shortly follow unless remedy be provided in time 2. To require the paiment of Ministers stipends 3. That Superintedents may be placed in such parts where none are 4. That these be punished who do shut the church-doors against the preachers coming to preach the word 5. humbly to require of her Majesty what the Church can expect of Benefices vaking or that shall vake 6. By what means Ministers shall come to the possession of Manses glebs whither they be set in fue or not 7. That the Act concerning the reparing of churches be put into execution III. Because there is a common report that many ignorants and of leud conversation are admitted to be Ministers and exhorters and Readers the Superintendents of Anguise Lothian and the West were ordained to visite certain bounds alloted now unto them and John Knox is to visite the Churches of Fife and Perth and others to visite other parts with power to trie suspend depose as they shall finde cause IV. Unto a supplication of Paull Meffan containing sundrie particulars it is answered that the assemblie is ready to accept him if he shall present himselfe before them shewing signes of unfained repentance and be willing to obey as the Church shall appoint unto him But to delete his processe the Church can no way condescend nor think they that petition to proceed from the Holy Ghost seeing David was not ashamed to write his own offense for glorifying God And to admitt him into the Ministry within the realm it is judged no way tollerable untill the memory of his crime be more deeply buried and some Church make request for him And it is signified unto him that the Church is grievously offended that he being excommunicat in Scotland hath taken upon him a Ministry in England I omitt the censures of Superintendents and Commissioners of visiting because it was ordinary Here also is mention of exhorters these were men not furnished with sufficient gifts for the Ministry and because of the scarcety of Ministers were permitted not only to read in a Church but to exercize also their talent in exhorting the people and if they did increase in gifts were admitted into the Ministry III. February following the Queen was in Fife and the Papists waxing more bold went to Masse and uttered words of blasphemie Which was delated to the Lords of Counsell As also some Popish Bishops Priests did brag that
they would say Masse at Easter The Earle of Murray lamented this unto the Queen and shew what inconveniences shall follow if this be permitted After sharp reasoning it was promised that the like shall not be done again and for the same purpose order was sent to such places as were delated especially to the b. b. of Sant Andrews and Aberdeen that they should not say any Masse At that time the Queen was upon a purpose of mariage as in two years space she was twice married and thogh she never changed her mind to love religion yet upon many changes of her passions in that space of time she gave more way unto the petitions of the Church thereby to gain the affections of the subjects And though there were frequent alterations in the countrie somtrmes one partie prevailing in Court and somtimes another so that it came to lifting armes nevertheless the Church-men did still keep their assemblies Juny 25. An. 1565. conveen the Superintendents The IX Assembly Ministers and Commissioners of Shyres burghs John willock is chosen Moderator 1. The Assembly humbly requires the Nobility here present to solicite the Queen for execution of the lawes Acts lately made against the violators of the sabboth adulterers and fornicators And ordeines every Superintendent to supplicat for Cemmissions unto the Judges within their severall bounds giving them charge and power to execute punishment against the committers of these crimes 2. Others were sent unto the Queen to humbly supplicate as in former assemblies for abolishing the Masse for establishing the true religion ...... and to complain that some vaking Benefices have lately been bestowed by her Maj. on Noble men and Barons as a Benefice in Carrick was given to the Laird of Skeldrom And to supplicate that none be permitted to have office in schools Colledges nor Universities nor privatly or publickly to teach the youths but such as shall be tryed by the Superintendents and Visitors of Churches to be sound in the faith and able to teach Also for sustentation of the poore that all lands which in former times were doted unto hospitalls be restored to the same use and that all lands annuall rents and other emoluments pertaining any way to the friers of whatsoever order and annualrents altarages obites belonging then to priests be applied to the sustentation of the poor and of schools in the towns or other places where these things are to be payd And that such horrible crimes now abounding in the realm without any correction as idolatry blasphemy manifest breaking of the sabboth-day witchcraft and inchantments adultery incest maintaining of bordels murder reiff and other detestable crimes may be severely punished and Judges be appointed in every Province for execution there of and that by Act of Pa liament Lastly that some order be devised and established for ease of the poore laborers of the ground concerning their tyths which are oppressed by the Leasers of the tyths 3. Some gentle men in Kile crave that Ministers be sent unto them and they will provide them sufficiently as the Assembly shall ordain them 4. It is ordained that children shall not contract marriage without consent of their parents or in case of the parents unreasonably denying consent they shall make suite unto the Church to concurre with them in their lawfull proceedings 5. Whereas some Beneficed men in time of Papistry were permitted to keep their Benefice and now being converted take upon them the ministry in another congregation it is concluded generally that none should have two benefices or livings 6. It is ordained that Io. Knox shall receive the answers from the Commissioners which are now sent unto the Queen and he shall send these answers unto the Superintendents as also he shall advertise the faithfull of things necessa●y that shall happen before the next assembly which now is appointed to conveen Septemb. 25. at Edinburgh The four Gentle men and one Burgher that were appointed by the Assembly to present thir petitions unto the Queen went to Sainiohnstoun and delivered them The next day the Queen went to Dunkell and they follow when they had audience they humbly crave her answer She said Her Counsell was not there but she intends to be in Edinburgh within eight days and then they shall have an answer When these Commissioners had waited five dayes after the Queen came to Edinburgh the matter was proposed in Councell and at last it was answered by the Secretary The Queen's Majesties command is that the matter shall be reasoned in her presence which for the gravity there of can not be now concluded albeit her Majesties hath now heard more here of than ever before but with in eight dayes a great part of the Nobility is to be here and then they shall have a finall answer August 21. they receive this answer in writ To the first desiring the Masse to be abolished in the head members with punishment against the controveeners and the professed Religion to be established by Act of Parliament It is answered for her Majestes part That her Highness is no way yet persvaded in that religion nor yet that any impiety is in the Masse and therefore believes that her loving subjects wi●l not presse her to receive any religion against her conscience which shall be unto her a continuall trouble by remorse of conscience and there with a perpetuall unquietnes And to deale plainly with her subjects her Ma. neither will nor may leave the religion wherein she hath been brought up and believes the same to be well grounded Knowing that besids the grudge of conscience that she shall receive upon the change of religion that she shall lose the friendship of the K. of France the married Allya of this realm and of other great Princes her friends and confederats who take it ill and of whom she may look for their great support in all her necessities and having no assured consideration that may countervail the same she will beloath to put in hazard all her friends at one instant prayinig all her loving subjects seing they have had experience of her goodnes that she hath not in timepast nor intends hereafter to presse the conscience of any but that they may worship God in such sort as they are persuaded in their conscience to be best that they also will not presse her conscience As for establishing religion in the Body of the realm they themselves know as appeares by their Articles that the same can not be done by consent of her Majesty only but requires necessarily the consent of the States in Parliament and therefore so soon as the Parliament holds these things which the States agree upon among themselves her Majesty shall consent unto and in the mean time shall make sure that none be troubled for using Religion according to conscience So that none shall have cause to doubt that for religions sake mens lifes and heritages shall be in any hazard To the second article it is
may be condescended-upon for that effect 7. That in places where no Superintendents are some may be placed Answers were returned on July 8. giving in a word a favorable answer unto them all and for the sixth article the eight day of August was named but that day was not keept and so nothing was done therein 5. None should bring unto the Gen. Assembly any question or complaint that should and may be decided in a provinciall Synod or if they shall they shall be rejected 6. Because the Bishop of Orknay hath given obedience and submission now upon his petition the Assembly restores him Providing that on a certain day he shall have the Sermon in the Church of Halyrudhouse and in the end theteof confesse his offence in marrying the Queen with the Earle of Bothuell which the Bishop promiseth to do 7. The Bishop of Galloway is ordeined to declare whither he will wait upon Court and Counsell or upon preaching the word and visiting the Churches the Superintendent of Fife Lothian and Anguise are appointed to crave and report his answer unto the next assembly and in the mean time John rowe Minister at Santjohnstoun is appointed to visite the Churches of Galloway 8. No man should possesse the patrimony of the Church and not do dutifull seruice and because it is known that some of them have gifts whereby they may be profitable in the Church admonition is given to such that they shall apply themselves according to their gifts and as the Church shall judge them able unto the Ministry And because all such persons are not present the Superintendenrs and Visitors of Churches shall cause warn them all to be present at the next generall Assembly When the 25. of December was come few did conveen because a report was that the town was infected with the pest and also were great stormes both in the south and north therefore letters of advertisement were sent to all Superintendents and Commissioners of visiting churches to keep the 25. day of February VIII The Regent returnes to Edinburgh February 2. from a Treaty 1569. with the Queen of England concerning the proceedings of this Country with Queen Mary and about the twenty day of the same month the Duke returnes with commission from the Queen Mary to be her Deputy he causeth publish Letters prohibiting the subjects to acknowledge any other Soveraigne than the Queen Wherefore the Regent by proclamation chargeth in the Kings name the subjects to meet him at Glasgow March 10. The Assembly conveenes at Edinburgh February 2● to wit Commissioners according to the Act of the former Assembly Da. Lindsay Minister The XVI Assembly at Lieth is chosen Moderator 1. A supplication is sent unto the Regent craving to take order with such persons as have received Benefices in time of Papistry and because they had quite the thirds think themselves free of all cure in the Church 2. That no Minister of Gods word have power to set tacks of his Benefice 3. To reduce all Benefices given to any person contrary to the Acts of Parliament or Counsell granted in favor of the Church The ordinary affaires were handled untill March 7. when a Letter was brought from the Duke shewing his good affection unto the Religion and his purpose to have all the subjects to live in a peaceable and quiet manner under the obedience of the Queen our Soveraigne regrating the proclamations made by the Earle of Morray and that not for fear of them as not deserving such and confident that the people and Nobil●ty will not be against him finally requiring to make his affaires and minde parent unto the people Or if they find not on his part that he offereth seekes what duty requires of his Christian profession that they would come and reason with him When this letter was read it was answered unto the bearer that they would send and acquaint the Regent with it and as it shall please please Him they will either write or send some of their number unto the Duke So they sent two Superintendents and a Minister unto the Regent to know his pleasure therein A●ter conference the result was that the Assembly should send unto the Duke and conferre with him and others of the Nobility that may bee with him and use all meanes to reconcile both him and them unto the obedience of the King and his Regent 3. A generall fast is appointed to be keept throughout all the realm to begin the 13. day of this instant in such places as may be timously advertised by the Superintendents and in other places so soon as they may be advertised and to continue for eicht dayes inclusivè and in the mean time to use the exercise prescribed before and to use sobriety in eating drinking praying namely that God would be pleased to quench that appearing fire of intestine troubles 4. Moe articles were sent unto the Regent to wit 1. That remedy may be provided against the oppression of the Earle Huntly and of others who have opposed the Collectors of the Church and tyrannously placed their own 2. That it may please his Gr. and the Counsell that the Church may proceed from admonitions to further censures against the said Earle all others guilty of the like oppression even to excommunication in case of his and their contempt 3. That the Church without offense may appoint Robert Pont in some other place where his labors may be more frutefull than heertofore they have been in Murray 4. That order be taken against such odious crimes as provoke Gods wrath against the wholl land and if his Gr. send us to the Justice-Clerk experience teaches sufficiently what he had done in any such matter 5. That once the Jurisdiction of the Church may be distinguished from that which is Civill 6. That the Question of adultery may be determined whither the adulterer shall be admitted to the benefite of marriage After this Assembly and the fast by means of these which were sent from the Assembly an agreement was made betwixt the Regent and the Duke in this manner that the Duke should submit himself to the Kings authority he and his friends should be restored unto their honors and possessions and that he should give surety for his their continuing in obedience unto the King The Earls Argile Huntly refuse to be comprised under this agreement but deal by themselves When the Duke heard that they would not accept the conditions though he came to Edinburgh at the day appointed he would have shifted the giving of his surety and rashly vented his mind that if he were free of that promise he would never consent unto it Therefore he and the Lord Hereis who was thought to have diverted him were imprisoned in the castle of Edinburgh Then Argyle and Huntly made their submission and agreement Then the Regent goeth into the North and setled all these parts in peace and took pledges of them for observing peace in time coming
Bishop or Beneficed person whatever because it is a distraction from his vocation Under pain of deprivation 4. Some articles were sent unto the Lord Regent namely that stipends be granted unto a Superintendent in every Province whither it bee where no Bishop is or whe●e is a Bishop who can not dischage his office as Santandrews Glasgow That in every Church destitute of a Minister such persons may be presented and ●tipends be granted unto them as are here present and whose names shall be delivered by the Bb. Superint or Commissioners 5. A complaint was made against the Bishop of Dunkell for ministration of the Lords Supper upon wo●k-dayes and he is forbidden to do so again but only upon the Lords day according to the order of other Churches 6. If any Parliament shall be called or any other weighty cause require the presence of the Body of the Assembly the Superintendent of Lothian James Lowson Minister at Edinburgh and David Lindsay Minister at Lieth shall give timous premonition unto the Brethren to conveen and that Convention shall be reputed an Assembly 7. The absents from the assembly shall be charged to compear in the next to be censured for their absence Note 1. James Boyd was enduced by the Lord Boyd to accept the title of the Bishoprick of Glasgow which that Lord had purchased for his own gain of the revenues and in the former Act he is named as unable unto the office and in the same assembly he excused his negligence in the Church-affaires because he was employd in other affairs of that office 2. Within some weeks after that assembly John called Archbishop of Santandrews went into the pulpit topreach and falling down died 3. By an Act under the privy Signet of the date November 21. 1574. it appeares that John erskin so long as he had been Superintendent had not been in the Shiref-court though he was a Baron and at that time had exemption granted both for time by past and to come during his continuance in that office XII The National Assembly conveenes at Edinb March 7. as they 1575. The 28. Assembly then did reckon year 1574. where were Earles Lords bb Superindents c. James Boyd Bishop of Glasgow is chosen Moderator 1. The bb of Dunkell Brechin Murray and of Glasgow were removed and complaints made against every one of them Alexander Bishop of Galloway now submitteth himselfe Upon his submission and by solicitation of the Lord Regent he obtaines dispensation to be accepted if he will confesle his offence in the church of Halirudhouse only 2. It is ordained that none be admitted unto the office of a Bishop unless he be examined and approved by the Assembly 3. No Comoedies nor tragoedies or such playes should be made on any history of Canonicall Scriptures nor on the sabboth day If any Minister be the writer of such a play he shall be deprived of his Ministry As for playes of another subject they also should be examined before they be propounded publickly 3. Whereas Andrew Graham hath been presented unto the bishoprick of Dunblain undet the name of a Preacher albeit he be not one and it is alledged that there hath been no conclusion that all Bb. should first be Preachers and so if he be qualified to be a Preacher the presentation should be accepted therefore the assembly appointeth him to preach on wednesday upon Rom. 5. 1. and nameth certain persons to be present 4. Bishops Superintendents and every Minister are enjoined to admonish all such as were Papists within their bounds and have subscribed the Confession of faith according to the Act of Parliament that they should also participate of the Sacrament duly with their own congregation under pain that they shall be held Relapse and be censured with excommunication It may appear from these what manner of Bishops these were and that the Presenters of them aimed at their own advantadge and not at the good of the Church In the Assembly at Edinburgh August 6. were The 29. Assembly Bb. Superintendents c. Robert Pont is chosen Moderator 1 When Bb. were removed to be censured John Dury Minister at Edinburgh protesteth that the tryall of Bishops shall not prejudge the opinions and reasons which he and other Brethren have against the office of such Bishops 2. Alexander Bishop of Galloway delivereth an attestation of his satisfaction according to the ordinance he is restored to the liberty of preaching and standes still suspended from commission of visitation but is ordered to assist John Row Commissioner of Galloway pro hac vice 3. The Bishop of Dunkell is ordained to reside with his family at Dunkell before the next Assembly Under pain of deprivation Hee is also accused of dilapidation of his Benefice hee craves that he may have the liberty of an Advocate to plead for him this is refused but he should answer for himself or chuse a Minister to argue for him within three days 4. Because comely and decent apparell is requisite in all men especially in these which have function in the Church therefore all Ministers and Preachers are forbidden to have any broudering bagaries of velvet on gown on cloke or coat or have any cutting out of their cloaths stitching with silk pesments or lace all variant colours on sherts rings bracelets buttons of silver or of any metall all velvet satine tafety any licht color but that all their habite be of grave color to the end the good word of God be not slandered by them and their immoderateness And that their vifes be subject unto the same ordinance 5. Because the long continuance of Commissioners may induce some ambition other inconvenients after long reasoning it is concluded by the grearter part that the Commissioners shall be changed yearly 6. Eight Articles to be presented unto the Lord Regent 1. for planting the word throghout the realm it is petitioned that such Ministers as are not as yet placed may be received Ministers which have many churches may be relieved and Commissioners be ●ased and Bb having too great a charge may be helped And prouision of Commissioners may be payd for these two years bypast and in time coming 2. That such impediments may be removed which hinder the progresse of the doctrine such as abundance of vice un punished markets on the Lords day and the troubling of Ministers in execution of theit Ministry 3. That the order concerning the poore which before was begun may be put to full execution and to that effect a portion of the tyths which is the Churche's patrimony a●swell of the two parts as of the thirds may be employd for their sustentation as necessity craves 4. Because the Schools are the fountains from which Ministers must flow that provision may be made for them not only for Students remaining within the realm but for some men of good engine which by this Church shall be found fit to visite other Churches and Vniversities for their furtherance in learning and
to dis-agree from a good order to be complained on unto the Gen. assembly next coming And the order which every presbytery takes shall be sighted and thereof one good order shal be established for all 5. The day of the Exercise shall be also the day of Ecclesiasticall process and if the brethren find it necessary for a process they may appoint days times places thereunto besids the day of Exercise 6. It is not thought expedient that the Presbytery shall be astricted to send their Moderator unto the Assembly but liberty to chuse whom they think most expedient for confort of the Church 7. It is not thought meet that visitation be excep ère nata and the same not to be limited unto the Moderator but to any two or moe as the Presbytery shall direct for the necessity of the matter according to the book of Policy 8. The Clerk and Moderator shall subscribe in grave matters and form of proceeding in name of the eldership and whill God provide some better contribution every particulare Church of the Eldership shall contribute for the Scrib's entertainment 9. The Ministers of the parish shall execute the summons concerning his parish and bear the burden of the things that are directed by the Presbyte●y or some depute by him within his parish 10. The order of admission of Elders is referred to the order used in Edinb which is approved 11. The Moderator of the Presbytery is to designe Manses and gleebs where it is r●quisite and for satisfaction of the Act of Parliament that they have a speciall commission for that effect Untill it please God to move the King that the Law may be reformed Providing the Moderator do nothing without advice of the Presbytery 12. How many Churches shall be in every Presbytery it is referred unto them who have commission to establish presbyteries 13. The form of process in weighty matters is to be in writ at the discretion of the presbytery pro re nata in lesser things to be verball 14. If any will not receive the office of an Elder and traveleth not in the word wee may exhort but not compell 15. Ordaines every presbytery within their own bounds to try their Ministers and if any offence shal be found to punish it according to the quality and estate of the crime before the next generall assembly 16. The Presbyteries shall try and examin the persons desiring to enter into the function of the Ministry and if they find them qualified to provide them unto Churches XII Ordaines a fast to be keept in all churches of the realm with doctrin and instruction of the people to begin the first Sunday of Juny next and to continue untill the next sunday inclusivè using in the mean time exercise of doctrin according to the accustomed order And the Kings Majesty to be certified by the Commissioners that are sent to him and to be supplicated that he would be pleased to authorize it by proclamation for that effect The causes are 1. universall conspiracies of Papists in all countries against Christians for execution of the bloody Acts of Trent 2. The oppression and thralldom of this Church of God 3. Wasting the rents thereof without remedy 4. Falling from former zeall 5. Flocking hither of Jesuits Papists 6. Manifest bloodshed incest adulteries with other horrible crimes defiling the land and unpunished 7. The danger wherein the Kings Majesty stands through evill company about him by whom it is feared he may be corrupt in manners Religion 8. Universall oppression contempt of the poore c. XIII The next Assembly is to be at Edinburgh Octob. 24. unless some necessary occasion interveen and advertisement to be made by the Eldership of Edinburgh and Ministers of the Kings house For clearing the process against Robert Mongomery it is heer to be added that about February 22. he went to Glasgow with purpose to preach the Sunday following but a number of the Students in the Colledge entred into the Church on Saturday at night to hold him out and keept the pulpit for their Principall Thomas Smeton That day his Text was He that entereth not by the door but by the window is a thief and a Robber and he inveighes against simoniacall entries into the Church The next Sunday Rob. Mong comes to the Church with a great number of Gentlemen and displaceth the ordinary Minister David Weemes and he made the Sermon And because the Chapter of Glasgow refused to conveen unto his election he caused summon all them of the Chapter to compear before the Counsell They again caused summon him to compear before the Synod of Lothian to hear the sentence of excommunication pronounced against him He informes the King of this citation and causeth warn the Synod to appear the 12. day of Aprile before the King and Counsell at Sterlin discharging in the mean time all proceeding in that business Robert Pont with some others compearing at the day in name of the others protestes that albeit they had compeared to testify their obedience unto his Majesty yet he did not acknowledge his Majesty and Counsell judges in that matter it being a cause ecclesiasticall and that nothing done at that time should prejudge the liberties of the Church and Lawes of the Realm The Counsell rejectes the protestation and did inhibit the Ministers to proceed against Mongomery Because the Generall Assembly was at hand they yeeld obedience in this only they caused warn him to compeare before the Assembly B. Spotswood hath th●se particulares but inverted and it is clear by Mongomerie's words in face of the Assembly that all these things were done before this Assembly Here is not an end of this business but after this Assembly he under took to settle himself at Glasgow and procured Letters from the King unto the Gentle men of these parts to assist him The Presbytery of Glasgow knowing what he had done intend process against him for usurping the place of the ordinary preacher Mathew Stuart of Minto being Provest of the City came and presented a warrant from the King to stay all proceedings against the Bishop and willeth them to desist John Howeson Minister at Cambuslang being then Moderator replieth that they will proceed noth withstanding that warrant Whereupon the Provest pulleth the Moderator on t of his seat and carrieth him prisoner to the Tolbuith The rumor of this went quickly through the Kingdom and in time of the fast that was appointed by the Assembly this fact was lamented by the Ministers Among others John Dury preaches against the Duke of Lennox as the cause of all this trouble Wherefore the King will have him removed out of the town and caused command the Magistrates to put him out of their town within 24. hours They not daring to disobey yet unwilling to use their Minister in that ma●ner dealt with him to depart quietly Upon this occasion advertisement was sent unto all Presbyteries to send their Commissioners unto Edinburgh according to
ordinary Offices warranted by the Scripture to wit Pastors Doctors Elders and deacons and the name of a Bishop should not be taken as it hath been in Papistry but is common to all Pastors or Ministers 3. It is lawfull and necessary at this time that Uisitation and the form thereof continue and other circumstances to be considered here after c. In Sess 7. some were appointed to confer with the Kings Commissioners upon the circumstances And in the same Sess the Kings Commissioners crave the resolution of the wholl Assembly Whither they will accept Bishops as they were circumscribed in the abovenamed Conference or if they will refuse Answer is delayd untill the next day that all the Conference be publickly read and immediatly it is voted and concluded that a Bishop is a speciall charge and function annexed to it by the word of God even the same that an ordinary pastor is In Sess 9. after reasoning it was concluded It is lawfull to the Gen. Assembly to admit a Pastor Bishop or Minister having a Benefice and presented by the King unto it Also that Visitation may be in the person of a Pastor and that the Gen. Assembly may send a man with such as the Presbytery shall adioyn unto him in Visitation In Sess 10. after conference had as said is the wholl Assembly declares that by the name of a Bishop they meane only such a Bishop as is described by Paul and in this sense they agree with the third Article of that Conference 4. It is agreed on the fourth article that a Bishop may be appointed by the Gen. assembly to visite certain bounds that shall be designed unto him and in Visitation he shall proceed by the advice of the Synodall assembly or such as they shall adjoyn unto him 5. In receiving of presentations and giving Collation to Benefices he shall proceed by the advice and vote of the Presbytery where the Benefice lyeth at least of the most part of the Presbytery and of the Assessors that shal be adjoined unto him Untill the time the Presbyteries be better established and the gener Church take further order And those assessors at the first time shall be named by the G. Ass 6. In Sess 11. He shall be subject in respect he is a Pastor as other Pastors are to be tryed in his life and doctrine by the Presbytery or the Synodall Assembly and because he hath commission from the G. Assembly in that respect he is to be tryed by them 7. If he admit or deprive without the consent of the most part of the Presbytery the deed shall be null and the doing thereof shall be a sufficient cause of deprivation of him 8. His power is to be ordinis causa nonjurisdictionis 9. Where they that shall be so called Bishops may not undertake the wholl bounds that of old was called a Diocy Commissioners shall be presented by his Ma. unto the Gen. assembly and admitted by them thereunto as the saids Bishops are to theirs and to be countable only unto the said assembly for their commission And the Bishop to have no power within their bounds more than they have within his boundes 10. The Commissioners being elected as said is have a like counsell and power in the execution of their office as the Bishops have 11. The Commissioners appointed to visit presbyteries or their particular Churches as the the presbyteties or Synods shall think good shall not prejudge the Presbyterie's peculiar Visitation 12. The same causes of life and doctrin shall deprive a Bishop or Commissioner that deprives a Minister The 13. article is agreed The Commissioners from his Majesty do protest that in respect the assembly hath cast down what was required in the Conference at Halirudhouse nothing done either in that Conference or in this assembly have any force or effect and namely that they have subjected the Bishops unto the tryall and censure of the Presbyteries Synods Because of this protestation the assembly immediatly directes Ja. Martine Ro. pont and Pa. Galloway to inform his Ma. concerning this matter In Sess 12. these brethren report that his Majesty will not agree that Bishops and Commissioners shall be otherways tryed than by the Generall Assembly The assembly j●dgeth it expedient in respect of the time that albeit it be reasonable that the tryall and censure of all Pastors should be in the Presbyteries where they remain nevertheless that the tryall and censure of such Pastors as the Generall Assembly shall give commission unto to Visite shall be in the hands of the said Assembly or such as they shall depute Untill farther order be taken by the Gen. assembly Unto this ordinance the Kings Commissioners do consent and so passe from their former protestation 14. Vhe Commissioners that before have received commission of Visitation shall continue in that charge for a year to come and thereafter as the Assembly shall judge expedient 15. In Sess 1● The Generall assembly gives full power commission unto certain brethren of every Province to summon before them respectivè at such day and place as they shall think expedient the Bishops and commissioners if they find occasion of slander to arise by them in doctrin life or conversation at any time before the next Generall assembly and to try and take probation thereof lead and deduce process against them unto the Sentence Exclusivè Remitting the finall judgement therein unto the Gen. assembly 16. It is agreed that where Bishops Commissioners make their residence they shall be Moderators in these presbyteries except Fife where by his Mas advice Robert Wilkie is continued Moderator of the presbytery of Santandrews untill the next Synod-VI In Sess 7. The Lord Maxwell compeares and declares that at his Ma s command he now appeares before the Assembly as he had given caution before the Counsell that he should compear before them this day and in respect of his obedience he protestes that his cautioner should be free he takes instrument upon his appearance and protestation The Assembly know not the cause of his compearance nor had any information from his Majesty therefore they order him to be present the next day after noon and they aske the kings Commissioners what the cause is The kings Commissioners do protest that Maxwel's Cautioner should not be free untill they return his Majest mind unto the Assembly In Sess 8. Compeares the Earle of Morton the Lord Maxwell and some others Maxwell was accused for hearing Masse The Act of the Privy Counsell was read for information of the Assembly Maxwell answered For his transgression he had answered the kings Law and he craves conference of learned men concerning the religion Certain Sentence against P. Adamson not examined yet annulled and why brethren were appointed to inform him VII In Sess 13. Concerning an appellation made by Pa. Adamson from the process and Sentence of excommunication pronounc●d against him by the Synod of Fife Pa. Galloway and John Duncanson had been
otherwise provided be discharged 3. That Judges may be appointed i● all Shyres for executing the Acts of Parliament made against the breakers of the Sabbath adulterers and such open transgressors of the Lawes 4. That in chief Burrowes there be teaching ordinarily four times in the week and seing moreover the disciplin visitation of the sick and other business are ordinary to Pastors therefore let two Ministers be appointed unto such Townes 5. That order be taken how Colledge-churches may be served 6. That order may be taken for Manse and gleebs unto Ministers making residence at Abbey-churches as also that such as have or shall have Manse and gleeb may have necessaries the●eunto to wit fuell pasturage feall and devat as was of old 7. That all gifts of Benefices having the cure of souls and have been disponed by your Ma pleno jure and not qualified persons presented unto them with ordinary tryall and Collation following thereupon May be declared null according to the Lawes already made and that your Ma. would give now presentations unto qualified persons and the nullity of the former gift be discussed alswell by way of exception as of action 8. That all presentations or gifts of Benefices of cure less than prelacies disponed alsweell by your Majesty as by laick parrons not allowable by the municipall law of the realm and form observed in the Reformed Church here since your Mas coronation may be annulled and new presentations granted as in the former 9. That all Collations granted by men having no Commission nor ecclesiasticall function in the Church nor in that place country at ●he time of giving the Collation Be declared null and the fruits be sequestred at the least untill the person claming right by that Collation be a new examined and admitted if he be found worthy by them who shall be appointed for that effect and authorized by this present assembly 10. That the Benefices of cure under prelacies whereunto Ministers are admitted may be free from payment of first fruits and fifty penny and may have their signatures of presentation exped by the Privy Seal on your Ma s own subscription only and the Secretarie's without any paiment or cautioner made to the Treasuter and these poor men which have already payd or found caution for payment whereof the Treasuter hath not already charged himselfe in his accounpts may have the same refounded or discharged 11. Seing the fault of not depriving unworthy culpable and no-resident Ministers proceeds from that sundry of the Bishops have been negligent and in some other parts there was no Bishop nor Commissioner and so the Acts are not execut therefore a Commission be given to some qualified persons Ministers to sit in Edinburgh and call the Nonresidents and others worthy of deprivation and deprive them So that there may be consultation of learned men and the process may be led without fear or boast 12. It is heavily complained by many poor Ministers having parsonages and vicarages assigned unto them that they are exorbitantly used in taxations albeit their Benefices be long since decaied by the want of corps presents up most cloathes pasch-fines offerings and such things usually payd in time of Papistry which was the greatest part of these Benefices and yet they must pay the extremity of the old taxation and the most part of the Prelacies are exeemed from preaching or Service in the Church and have relieff off the fuars and vasalls that therefore there may be some more equitable order of taxation appointed in time coming 13. That it will please his Majesty to cause consider what prelacies have vaiked since the Act of Parliament made in Octob. 1581. and that speciall assignation be made for sustaining Ministers of the churches belonging to them out of the readiest fruits of these churches or the provision to be declared null according to the Act. 14. That the Bishops or Commissioners of Argyle and the ●sles may be tied to attend on the Generall assemblies and to keep theyr Exercise and Synodall assemblies as in other parts which shall be a furtherance unto your Mr s obedience seing otherwise they seem as exeemed out of your Dominion 15 That your Ma. will give direction unto some persons of experience and good will to search enquire try the true estate of the rentalls of all prelacies and other Benefices at this present and in whose fault or by what occasion they are so hurt and dismembred and thereafter the best remedies may be considered and provided to help them for the good alswell of the King as of the Church 16. That your Majesty will cause the Lords of Session declare whither your Majesty or the Earle of Orknay have right to the patronages of the Benefices of Orknay and Yetland to the end thal titles of Benefices conferred to Ministers be not ever in danger of annulling upon uncertanty of the right of the patronage 17. That no persons or stipends be put in the books of modification but only such as the Commissioners of the Church shall declare to be qualified and resident at their churches 18. That vicarages pensions and salaries when they vaik after the decease or deprivation of the present possessor may accrease and be joyned to the principall Benefice and be assigned to the Minister in his stipend 19. That all Readers heretofore provided to vicarages or stipends may still possess the same untill their decease or deprivation and none to be admitted to the title of any Benefice of cure or stipend in the book of modification in time coming but qualified Ministers 20. That the wholl rents of the Benefices of cure under prelacies that are disponed since your Ma s corona●ion may be assigned wholly and allowed unto them in their stipends 21. That the judgement of all causes concerning the deprivation of Ministers from their Benefice in the second instance shall come by way of appellation unto the Generall assembly and there take finall end and not before the Lords of Session by way of reducing X. In Sess 18. the brethren directed unto the King with certain Articles craving publick resolution report his Ma s answer that in all the Heads he found litle difficulty and hath agreed unto them I. That there be a Generall Assembly once every year and ofter pro re nata II. Concerning Provinciall Synods The power of Provinciall Assemblies 1. these are constitut for weighty matters necessary to be treated by mutuall consent and assistance of Brethren within the Province as need requires 2. This Assembly hath power to handle order and redress all th●ngs done amisse or omitted in the particular assemblies 3. It hath power to depose the office-bearers of that Province for just and good causes deserving deprivation His Majesty agreed not to this but in this manner of addition Except Bishops and Commissioners 4. And generally these Assemblies have the wholl power of the particular Elderships or presbyteries whereof they are collected III. Concerning Presbyteries
The power of Presbyteries 1. The power of a Presbytery is to give diligent labours in their own bounds that the churches be keept in good order to enquired diligently of naughty ungodly persons and travell to bring them into the way again by admonition and threatning of Gods judgement or by correction 2. It appertaines to them to take heed that the word of God be purely preached within their bounds the Sacraments rightly administred the disciplin mantained and the church-goods incorruptly destributed 3. It belongs unto them to cause the ordinances made by the Assemblies Provinciall and Generall to be observed and put execution 4. To make constitutions which concern TÒ PREPON in the Church or good order for their particular churches Providing that they change no rule made by the Provinciall or Gener. assemblies and that they shew unto the Provinciall the rules which they make and to abolish constitutions tending to the hurt of these churches 5. It hath power to excommunicate the obstinat His Majesty agrieth in this manner It hath power to excommunicat the obstinat formall process being led and due intervall of time 6. Faults to be censured in the presbytery are heresy papistry idolatry witchcraft consulters with witches contempt of the word not resorting to hear ●he word continuance in blasphemy against God and his truth perjury fornication dunkennes these things for the present and more when order shall be taken in the Conference IV. Particular The power of Church-Sessions or Counsels Churches if they be lawfully ruled by a sufficient Minister and Session have power of jurisdiction in their own congregation in matters ecclesiasticall to take order therewith and what things they can not conveniently decide to bring them unto the Presbytery XI Commissioners are appointed to present unto his Majesty and Counsell the humble petitions complaints Articles and Heads delivered to them and humbly to crave his Ma s answers thereunto To treat conferr reason thereupon and upon such heads and articles as shall be propounded unto them by his M. or his Commissioners and what herein shall be done to report unto the Assembly For clearing what is here I will only adde from The Historicall Narration that the Synod of Fife did cut off Pa. Adamson as a rotten member not only for the notoriety of offenses for which he was suspected before but likewise for impugning the setled order of Generall assemblies and presbyteries for contempt of the Synod and for other notorious slanders whereof he was to be accused but refused to underly the tryall The next day after the Sentence pronounced against him two of the Bishops servants went to the church of the city at time of publick prayer as the custome was then evening and morning on the days when there was no Sermon and without any citation or process caused Samuel Cuningham Reader pronounce the Sentence of excommunication against And. Melvin James Melvin and some others who he thought had been most forward against the Bishop Wee see in the last Session of this Assembly the censure and tryall of this fact was remitted unto the Presbytery I have not read what was done in the matter but I knew the man and that he could never be admitted unto the Ministry though he often suited it untill another change came into the Church and then he was promoted by a Bishop into an obscure charge and was hatefull all his days and durst scarcely appear in a presbytery The bare narration of the proceedings of this Assembly as they be extracted out of the Assemblies books confute the perverse imputations and slanders of the contrarily minded The rest of that year the King was taken up partly with setling some troubles in the Isles and Kentyre and partly in the Articles of a League with England and immediatly thereafter with a process that was intended and went on against his mother This last purpose was occasion of some variance be twixt the King and the Ministers of Edinburgh For XXIII In January of the year 1587. the King hearing that the death 1587. of his mother was determined gave order unto the Ministers to pray for her The adversarics of the Church-disciplin say The Ministers denied it absolutely and they call that denyall a barbarous inhumanity But Vindiciae Philadelp Pag. 56. shew that the Papists were plotting the destruction of Queen Elisabeth nor was Queen Mary free of these plots and by that means the ruln of religion was intended and the Ministers of Edinburgh answered unto the King that they would pray for the salvation of her soul but they could not pray against her punishment if she had deserved and in that case his Majesty should rather give God thanks because they understood that both his person and the Church would be delivered from imminent danger For whosoever trespasseth against the publick no man should preferr his particular interest unto publik duty This answer did not satisfy the King he did appoint the third of February for solem prayers to be made in behalf of his mother and commanded Pat. Adamson to preach that day John Couper a young man was set up in the pulpit before the Bishop came The King seeing him said That place was appointed at this time for another but seing you are there if you will obey the charge and pray for my mother you shall go-on He replied He will do as the Spirit of God shall direct him Whereupon he was commanded to leave the place and because he made no haste the Captain of the Guard went and pulled him out and he burst out into unreverent speaches Then the Bisbop went up In the after-noon the young man was called before the Counsell where Wi. Watson Minister accompanying him for offensive speaches the two were discharged from preaching in Edinburgh during his Ma s pleasure and Couper was sent prisoner to Blackness The The 48. Assembly Assembly conveenes at Edinburgh Juny 20. Andrew Melvin Is chosen Moderator I. Two Ministers being directed unto the King to sute his Ma s presence report that he had named the Lord Secretary and Justice-Clerk to be present and concurre and they had promised to be present as their opportunity could serve yet willing that the Assembly according to his Ma s mind do treat before any other thing of John Cowper's cause and nevertheless after some reasoning were content it be delayd till the next day and that the brethren of the Conference shall consider it II. His Ma s Commissioners offer theyr concurrence to the recovery of the Assemblie's books if it may be known in whose hands they are The Moderator craves that if any can give light in this matter they would shew it and namely Pa. Galloway who was directed by the last Assembly unto the King to seek the delivery of the Register he answereth that his Majesty promised to deliver them John Brand declares that at the last Assembly in his house Pa. Adamson in presence of David Ferguson said he knew
patrons Shall stand untill the next assembly with this addition That the person who shall admit shall incurr the censure of the Church VI. Violaters of the sabbath under which are comprehended parishoners absenting themselves from the Sermons of their own parish without a just cause and blaspheemers of God are ordained to be tryed and censured by the particular Sessions of the parish and who shall be convict of these offences shall be denied of the benefits of the Church with further censure as the word of God will allow VII The aged and wee l meriting in the Ministry should be preferred to young men caeteris paribus being found qualified by the Presbyteries where Churches are vaiking and they agreeing with the Congregation VIII The Presbytery of Edinb having received commission from the former Assembly to call Pa. Adamson before them for solemnizing the marriage of Huntly now deliver their process shewing that for his contumacy in not compearing after citations they had deprived him from all function in the Church The Assembly judgeth the process formall ratifieth their sentence and ordaines it with other sentences that were pronounced against him to be published in all the churches B. Spotswood saith The Bishop complained unto the king who shewed himself extreamly displeased with their doings but espying no better way he resolved to dissemble his anger toward them and to take the imprisoned Lords in favor lest he make himself too much business Thereupon he returnes to the North gives Arroll a pardon puts Crawford to liberty and fully remits him Huntly and Both well he freeth from imprisonment but to hold them in awe he deferres the declaration of his will concerning them The Lord Maxwell upon his bond not to practize against religion under pain of a hunder thousand pounds is likewise dimitted So far he In many other passages he saith that what good the king had done for the Church he did it against his own mind and dissembling for the time and here he forgeth that for envy against the Church the king takes the Popish Lords into favor What could an enemy of the religion write more perversly against the fame of the king But the truth is as he also expresseth it but mixed with these calumnies the king at that time was every day expecting the arrivall of his Queen and was desirous to have all things quiet at her coming and therefore he took that course with the Popish Lords As for Pa. Adamson the king knew what commission the assembly had given unto the Presbytery of Edinburg and he knew their proceedings and nevertheless in the beginning of this Assembly as this Bishop speakes he spoke of his good affection toward the Church and in the Assemblies following he declared his good affection more and more But as the historicall Narration shewes the King was so vexed with complaints against Pa. Adamson especially for debts for which he was lying registred at the horn and he was so ashamed of him because he was so odious for others faults that he rejected him and disponed his life-rent unto the Duke of Lennox whereby the man became miserable that enduring his sicknes he had not to maintain himself and was b●ought into such necessity to seek relieff of others whom before he had accounted his enemies he sent also to the presbytery of Santandrews and craved to be absolved from the Sentence of excommunication Some Ministers were sent unro him to try his sincerity before them he cried often and pitifully Loose mee for Christ's sake Upon their report he was absolved His recantation in certain articles was presented in his name by a Minister John caldcleugh unto the next Synod of Fife thence some were directed unto him again and he gave them a more ample and clearer recantation subscribed with his hand and as the Writer of Vindic. Philadelp pag. 62. shewes it was subscribed before many witnesses of whom some were Noble men some Ministers some Lawiers some Burgesses all of good credite Here also wee see as it is written in that place last cited the force of excommunication howbeit before he had despised the Sentence yet ere he died all his wretchedness did not so much grieve him as that did and he wished nothing on earth more than that he might die in the bosom of the Church In another place the enemy of the Church discipline saith Whether he knew what was contained in these articles it is uncertain If it be uncertain unto that writer why doth he oppose it so denying the credite of so many famous witnesses But I goe-on Because the Queen having once taken the sea was put back by storm to Norway the King would go unto her and without knowledge of the Counsell takes the sea October 22. and some Noble men with him on the fourth day he landeth In Norway and stayd there and in Denmark untill May. All that time was no sturre in the country which was matter of great joy unto him when it was reported unto him XXVII When the king retured with the Queen May 20. 1590. he went straight way to Church and caused publick thankes be given unto God for his save return then he gave thankes unto the Noble men and Counsell for their care of the publick quietnes Then was great joy in the Country and a great concourse of people unto Court The Assembly conveens The 52. Assembly at Edinburgh August 4. very frequently the kings Commissioners the Lords Chancelor and Blantyre Patrick Galloway is chosen Moderator I. Commissioners were particularly enquired what diligence they had used in the execution of the late Act against Papists excommunicat persons profaners of the sabbath non-residents and other heads that were committed unto the Presbyteries and Commssioners II. In Sess 3. John Inness Commissioner of Murray was accused for admitting Robert Dumbar to the Ministry without the advice of the Presbytery of Forress he answeret● he had done it by the advice of the presbytery of Elgin wherein he confesses he had done rashly The Assembly ordaines Robert Dumbar to be tryed de novo by so many as be present of the Presbyteries of Edinb Forress In Sess 12. the admission of Robert Dumbar without the advice of the presbytery of Forress is declared null III. Because the Earle of Montrose is said to entertain Fentry an excommunicat Papist it is ordained that the Presbytery where he dwelleth for the time shall charge him before them try the matter and accordingly proceed against him according to former Acts IV. A sentence of excommunication pronounced against the Earle of Anguise is reduced because of informality but because in the Sentence was sufficient cause of such censure if the process had been formally led the Church now craves that he would remove the cause especially that he will have care in time coming that the sabbath be not profaned within his bounds by faires or markets that no working nor carrying of burdens therein that vasalls compell not their tennants to
with advice of his Counsell certain Barons and gentle men are directed to remain in the south parts of this realm hath promitted and by these presents promits in the word of a Prince that the same Barons shall not be licenced to return unto the said north parts nor shall any favor or pardon be granted unto the said Earles Iesuits nor other above specified any order be taken nor dispenced with without the speciall knowledge and advice of the Lieutenent or Commissioner for the time and sixe of the principall Barons at least inhabitants of the said north parts subscribers of this present Band And this to do wee the said Noble men Barons and other foresaids have sworn and swear by the great God our Creatour Jesus Christ his Sone our Redeener and the Holy Ghost our Sanctifier witness of the verity here agreed upon add revenger of the breach thereof and further wee oblige us thereunto under the pain of periury infamy and losse of credite of honor estimation in time coming besides the Lawes to be executed against us In witnes whereof we have subscribed these presents with our hands as followes even as his Ma. in token of allowance and approbation of the premisses hath subscribed the same Act At Aberdien the day of March 1592. Sic subscribitur Ja. R. Lennox Athol Mar Marshall James L. Lindsay John L. Innerness John Mr of Forbes c. With this is written the Proclamation made at Halirudhouse Jan. 5 1592. 1593. according to the reckoning now Forsomuch as albeit the dangerous effects of the couered and busie travells of Jesuits Seminary-priests born subjects of this realm and others strangers in these late years have been feared and espied and for that cause by sundry lovable lawes Acts proclamations both their own remaining and the receiving of them have been prohibited under diverse high paines yet their coloured simplicity hath so far prevailed as they have not only purchased unto themselves favor credite to be keept huirded entertained in sundry parts of the realm After many promises made that they shall depart forth of the same but also have taken occasion and leisure to persuade sundry of his Hieness's subjects to apostasie from that religion wherein they were once instructed grounded and have confirmed in their errors and at last have seduced them to cast off their due obedience which they owe unto his Majesty and enter into a treasonous conspiracy for in-bringing of strangers Spainards into this realm the next Spring or sooner to the overthrow of his Hieness and all professing the true religion with him and to the ruin and conquest of this antient Kingdom and liberty which this Nation hath enioyed so many ages that it may be subject hereafter to the slavery tyranny of that proud Nation which hath made so unlawfull cruell conquest in diverse parts of the world al●well upon the Christians as infidels wheresoever the aid of Spain hath been sought Regarding in end no better the inbringers than them against whom they were brought being once victors commanders as easily may be proved by speciall exampls which the malitious a●d minaturall subjects of this Land would repute but as generall and improbable discourses published in hatred of that Nation to which they have already sold themselves slaves and are their friends factors in this Land as they speak and write Were it not thath it pleased the almighty God to make the proof heerof certain and without all doubt by detecting of the simple trueth of the intention finall causes of all the crafty practises of these pernicions trafficking Papists Jesuites and Seminary-priests against God true religion his Ma and liberty of this Country namely Mr Iames Gordon father-brother to the Earle of Huntly Ro. Abercromy father-brother to the Laird of Murtle whose letters directions advices yea and the messingers or carryers of their credits and certain others chieff instruments and furtherers of their trade God hath casten into his Hieness hands when the ship appointed for their transporting was in full readiness Whereby his Majesty is now not only sufficiently forewarned of the imminent danger to the true religion his own estate person his realm and faithfull subjects but resolved with Gods help by whose providence he hath been so wonderfully delivered from many former perrills to try the full circumstances of this so high a conspiracy and detestable treason To withstand it and punish it and on all guilty thereof in example to all posterity that none of his subjects heretofore abused and deceived by the crafty illusions of these pernicious and busie workmen shall remain any longer doubtfull of the truth of his Majesties mind intention Ordaines Letters to be directed to Officers of arms shirrefs in that part to make publication of the premisses by open proclamations at the market-crosses of the head burghs of this realm and other places needfull for warning them of the many dangers if they shall suffer themselves to be any longer in error by these deceiving spirits to the perrill of their souls landes and goods And therefore to abstain from further hearking to their treasonous persuasions and from all entertaining receiving supply intercommoning or having intelligence with them directly or indirectly under whatsoever pretext or color Under pain of treason Commanding also all sundry his Ma s faithfull obedient subjects that love feare God wish the standing wel fare of his Majesty their Soverain Lord King professing with him the true and Christian religion and desire that their own wifes chidren and posterity should now and hereafter enjoy the commodities of this their native Countrey unconquest and made slaves in souls bodies to merciless strangers That they implore the mercy protection of the Almighty God for their defense save guard and put themselves in arms by all good meanes they can remaining in full readiness to pursue or defend as they shall be certified by his Majesty or other wayes find the occasion urgent in the mean time diligently espying and getting intelligence of the treasonable courses and proceedings of the said Jesuits priests their favorers mantainers and receipters and make advertisement to his Counsell thereof with all speed celerity as they will answer unto God and his Majesty thereupon Sic subscribitur James R. These being read the Assembly gives their power commission unto Pa. Galloway Pe. Black burn Pa. Simson to give information unto his Majesty residing then at Sterlin of the evident dander imminent to the Church of God within this realm according to the instruction given unto them and to present unto his Majesty their humble articles petitions for removing the said dangers and to insist with all humility and due reverence for hit Ma s good answer thereunto and to report with all diligence his Ma s answer before the Assembly dissolve The tenor of the articles followes The same dangers which before by the crafty pernicious
he was more afrayed for the Pr●sbyteries officer or Sumner than for an officer of arms Upon the 16. day of December the King sent for four Ministers of Edinburgh but Robert Bruce refused to enter into any more commoning untill the Commissioners of the Church were recalled by al 's publick honest a proclamation as it was unhonest and calumnious so he called it by which they were charged to depart The Secretary after advisement promised it should be so Whill they were thus under commoning there was a purpose to charge of the most zealous Burgesses of Edinburg to depart out of the town specially these who did watch in the night for savety of their Pastors for some of the Cubiculares envying the Octavianes who had the managing of the Kings revenues whereby the Cubiculares were disappointed of their pensions had advertised the Ministers to be upon their guard night and day and also give advertisement to the chief Octavians to keep their gates shutt So oile was casten upon the flamm already kindled The chief Octavianes were President Setoun Sir James Elphinstoun Mr Thomas hamilton the Kings Advocate and Secretary Lindsay the cheif Cubiculares were Sir George hume thereafter Earle of Dumbar Sir Patrick and David Murrayes brether of Balvaird Many of both these sorts were alwise suspected of Papistry December 17. the charge was executed against one of the twenty four Walter The fray of December 17. An. 1596 Balcanquell being advertised before he went to pulpit layd forth before the people all the proceedings betwixt the King the Octavians and the Ministers and according to a warrant he had from the Church he requested Barons gentle men present and others well affected to conveen in the litle Church and consult how the imminent danger to religion might be prevented When they were conveened Robert Bruce layd forth the present dangers and exhorted them to hold up their hands and swear to the defense of religion presently professed Then they directed two Noble men Lindsay Forbes two Barons Bargainny and Blairwhan and two Bailives of the town unto the King with certain articles for redressing wrongs done unto the Church and preventing imminent dangers They entreat Robert Bruce to accompany them and to propone the matter Then hearing that the King was come to the Tolbooth they went unto him in the upper-house and the Minister said The Noblemen gentle men and others presently conveened apprehending the danger imminent to religion by hard dealing against the Ministry and zealous professors have directed some of their number unto your Majesty What appearance is there of danger said the King The burgesses best affected to religion are under commoning charged to depart out of town the Lady Huntly is entertained at Court and there is vehement suspicion that her husband is neer at hand The K. said What have yee to do with that and so goeth from them drawn as appeared by the President and others about him They who were sent return unto the rest which had sent them and report thus Wee went to his Majesty as yee desired but were not well accepted nor our gr●evance heard and now yee have to consider what is next to be done It was thought good to reserve their grievances to a better time and for the present to knit up a covenant with God to stand to their profession and defense of the good cause to their last breath Whereunto they all agree testifying it by holding up their hands then was a great applause of the present company The Minister craves to behave themselves quietly for regard unto the cause At this time comes a cry from the street to the Church-door with these words Save yourselves there is a tumult in the striet Another cry went through the striet with these words Arme arme I heard saith my Author a Noble man a Counseller affir● that it was one suborned by the Cubiculares who came to the door and after went to the striet and raised the cry but who it was it is not yet known The people within the Church apprehending it was a fight among parties as was frequent in these dayes leap to the striets The greater number of Burgesses being in their houses sent forth to enquire what the matter meaned they hear that the Ministers were invaded and the cry went The Ministers are slain whereupon they run into the striets in arms The Gentle men which were in the Church accompanied R. Bruce into his house and then went to their lodgins yet purposing to return into the Church-yaird for they feared the Minister was to be invaded The other Ministers went into the striets to try what it was after a litle sapce the gentlemen return into the church-yaird they call for Robert Bruce and tell him of the great dis-order among the people by a false alarm and none could know what was the ground of the fray They all lament the case they sent for some of the Magistrates and entreat them to pacify the people running some one way and some another some to the church thinking that the Ministers were invaded or slain and some to the Tolbooth doore which was shutt thinking that the King had been slain Two or three cried at that doore for three of the Octavianes that they might take order with them Another cried The sword of the Lord and of Gideon The King sent a charge to the Provest and Bailives to stay the tumult The people at command of the Magistrates went to their houses and layd aside their weapons Whill the Magistrates were doing their best the King sent the Earle of Marre and Lord Halirudhouse to the Barons Ministers conveened in the church-yaird with many and plausible speaches but some hote words passed betwixt Lindsay Marre The Barons and Ministers went into the litle Church again sate down and directed the former commissioners at least the most part of them to shew his Majesty that they were grieved at their heart for the tumult and to beseech him to provide some remedy against the present evills The King seemed to be well pleased willed them to set down their petitions and promised a reasonable answer Soon thereafter the Lairds of Cesford Traquair and Col. Stewart weresent to them to put them in expectation that all shall go well So they disolve with publick thanks giving to God for his gracious providence disposing such an accident after such a manner that no man had received harm and the people had reteered to their houses at the voice of the Magistrates The Lord Forbes Bargainny Blairwhan and Faldounside were directed again with these articles that such Octavianes as favored the forfeited Earls and were authors of the present troubls in the Church be removed the excommunicated Earls be commanded to depart out of the Country before any of their offers be heard and the commissioners of the generall assembly be recalled by a publick proclamation When these came to the utter court of the Palace they understood
none So the Reformed Religion only hath place in the Churches The Provinces of Holland and Zeeland held their first Synod at Dort An. 1574. and all the seven had their first Synod at Middelburgh An. 1578. in which they did agree on the order in the Churches Concerning which two Synods I shall subjoyn the words of the Provincial Synod of South and North Holland held at Harlem in the year 1582. as a summary of them both and of other particulares These are The almighty and mercifull God had in the year 1566. under the sad affliction which was then prepared for the Netherlands graciously shew'd a blink of the truth of his Gospell untill this time here and there in privat preaching but the world's unthankfulness and sin did thē turn away that grace of God and many honest persons when others fled the Land did readily suffer the Spainish tyranny over the Land through the just judgement of God whereby not only the publick exercise of ●he true Religion was no way permitted but also it was most strictly forbidden in privat and punished with intolerable edicts and torments Nevertheless our good God according to his wisdom and goodness hath contrary to all the power of Satan and his instruments in the time of that cruell persecution discovered by many more and more the idolatry superstitions and errors of Popery and did enlighthen them with the knowledge of his trueth with great hazart of their goods bodies and lifes and they prayd zealously unto God that he would look upon their affliction and deliver them as at last it is come to pass without the Counsel and wit of any men for when the persecution was come to the highest those who had seen with their eyes the persecution of the Christian Church and truth of the Holy Gospell yea who in their ignorance as we many certainly think at least of many had willingly suffered themselves to be abused as instruments thereunto that those I say have resisted the Spainish government and refusing those unreasonable exactions have begun to consider of their priviledges and former liberties seeing it was intended not only to root out the true Religion but likewise to bring into perpetuall slavery all the indwellers of the Netherlands both spirituall as they were wont to speak and Politicks of high and low degree citizens and merchants tradesmen and others with wifes and children And the matter was so far brought after that our just supplications were not accept nor heard that some both without and within the Land though with a smal beginning did gainstand the tyranny By those hath the Lord God who heard the prayers of the faithfull and in this age of the world of his mercy gathered unto himself a Church within these Lands and wrought another work in setting up by them in the midst of those troubles his Gospell and causing it to be preached again first in Holland and Zeeland Which when many who hethertils knew nothing of the Gospell saw with pleasure and untill that time had been silent for they were slack in the just cause to fight for the priviledges and freedom of the Land and to defend them and did find themselves unable to resist them who loved the Gospell for this cause those people were willing to apply themselves with all faithfulness to defend the liberties of their native Land seeing that also they might serve God with a pure conscience when God had opened a way thereunto What other motives were to joyn unto this cause is needless to repeat Yea God hath given the grace that by those foresaid meanes he hath not only made a beginning of maintaining our Civil liberty against the Spanish goverment over all the Netherlands howbeit the matter was weak and miserable to the end the glory of our deliverance should be given unto God only but he hath also more and more promoted the preaching of the Gospell in Holland and Zeeland by adjoyning the Lords the States of the Land and his Princely Excellency to delight therein and as some had adjoyned themselves unto the Christian Church so have they also seeing that the Land might heerby by the better defended from the enemy received and sufficiently established the publick exercise of the Reformed religion by publick edicts and other furtherances and so Popery is set off here and there by degrees and at last the exercise thereof is forbidden Therefore necessarily the ordinances of the Church that were privatly used under the persecution must be made known unto other preachers who are accepted out of Popery or otherwise because the Churches are numerous to the end there may be an unity in pure doctrine and uniformity of Service and the Church and their leaders may increase and be perfited in godliness of conversation For which end a Synod or assembly of Ministers and Elders out of all the Churches in the Provinces of Holland and Zeeland by the knowledge and approbation of his Princely Excellency and of the high States of Holland Zeeland was called to Dort Where after conference in the affaires of the Church and amending of some enormities that had fallen out a form of administration and government of the Churches was appointed so far as they could in time of the grievous warrs where with these Lands were then burdened But after that it is remarkable that some persons being driven either through their weakness or through dregs of Popery or of any other sect which have retarded the Gospell thought it not good that in the Church should be such ordinances and a Consistory that is an assembly of Ministers Elders and deacons but would rather that Ministers should only preach and administrat the sacraments admitting every man without difference c. and that the Magistrats should set off and on the Ministers and rule the Churches as they shall find usefull expedient And this was done under the shew of liberty of conscience And it was also said that the Ministers were beginning a new Monkery whereby in progress of time they would become Masters over the Magistrats as it was in Popery By these words plausible and acceptable unto the world other thoughts were brought upon the Gospell and the advancement of it was hindred But these had not considered that the offices of the Magistrats and of the Ministers were distinct and as unto the Magistracy which is a service of God belongs the government of life and the protection of both the Tables of Gods law under which is comprehended that they should advance Gods trueth by their defence and maintainance So unto the Ministers who in other causes are subject with body and goods unto the Magistrats belongeth their proper office which they have from God to inform teach stirr up exhort and move the consciences of men unto holiness not according to the mind or will of any men but after the direction of the Gospell to do their best endeavours And that the Church of Jesus Christ in the administration of