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A67922 Actes and monuments of matters most speciall and memorable, happenyng in the Church. [vol. 1] with an vniuersall history of the same, wherein is set forth at large the whole race and course of the Church, from the primitiue age to these latter tymes of ours, with the bloudy times, horrible troubles, and great persecutions agaynst the true martyrs of Christ, sought and wrought as well by heathen emperours, as nowe lately practised by Romish prelates, especially in this realme of England and Scotland. Newly reuised and recognised, partly also augmented, and now the fourth time agayne published and recommended to the studious reader, by the author (through the helpe of Christ our Lord) Iohn Foxe, which desireth thee good reader to helpe him with thy prayer.; Actes and monuments Foxe, John, 1516-1587. 1583 (1583) STC 11225; ESTC S122167 3,006,471 816

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write or do any good but either by flattering a man must offend the Godly or by true speaking procure hatred with the wicked Of such stinging Waspes and buszing Drones I had sufficient triall in my former edition before who if they had found in my book any iust cause to carpe or vpon any true zeale of truth had proceded agaynst the vntruths of my story and had brought iust proofes for the same I could haue right well abide it For God forbid but that faultes wheresoeuer they be should be detected and accused And therfore Accusers in a Common wealth after my mind do serue to no small stead But then such Accusers must beware they play not the dog of whom Cicero in his Oration speaketh which being set in Capitolio to fray away Theeues by night left the Theeues and fell to barcke at true men walking in the day Where true faultes be there to bay barcke is not amisse But to carpe where no cause is to spye in other strawes and to leape ouer theyr owne blockes to swalow Camels and to strayne gnattes to oppresse truth with lyes and to set vp lyes for truth to blaspheme the deare Martyrs of Christ and to Canonize for Sayntes whom Scripture would scarce allow for good Subiectes that is intollerable Such barcking Curres if they were well serued would be made a whyle to stoope But with these brauling spirites I entend not at this time much to wrastle Wherefore to leaue them a while till further leasure serue me to attend vpon them thus much I thought in the meane season by way of Protestation or petition to write vnto you both in generall particular the true members and faythful Congregation of Christes Church wheresoeuer either cōgregated together or dispersed through the whole Realme of England that forsomuch as all the seeking of these Aduersaryes is to do what they can by discrediting of this History with slaunders sinister surmises how to withdraw the Readers frō it This therfore shal be in few wordes to premonish and desire of all and singuler of you all well minded louers and partakers of Christes Gospell not to suffer your selues to be deceiued with the big brags and hyperbolicall speeches of those flaundering tongues whatsoeuer they haue or shall hereafter exclame agaynst the same But indifferently staying your iudgement till truth be tryed you will first peruse then refuse measuring the vntruthes of this Hystory not by the scoaring vp of theyr hundreds and thousandes of lyes which they geue out but wisely weying the purpose of theyr doinges according as you finde and so to iudge of the matter To read my bookes I allure neither one nor other Euery man as he seeth cause to like as he list If any shall thinke his labor to much in reading this history his choyce is free either to read this or any other which he more mindeth But if the fruite thereof shall recompence the Readers trauell then would I wish no man so light eared to be caryed away for any sinister clamour of Aduersaryes who many times depraue good doinges not for the faultes they finde but therefore finde faultes because they would depraue As for me and my history as my will was to profite all and displease none so if skill in any part wanted to will yet hath my purpose bene simple and certes the cause no lesse vrgent also which moued me to take this enterprise in hand For first to see the simple flocke of Christ especially the vnlearned sort so miserably abused and all for ignoraunce of history not knowing the course of times and true discent of the Church it pittyed me that part of diligence so long to haue bene vnsupplyed in this my countrey Church of Englande Agayne considering the multitude of Chronicles and story writers both in England and out of England of whome the most part haue bene either Monkes or Clientes to the sea of Rome it grieued me to behold how partially they handled theyr storyes Whose paynefull trauell albeit I cannot but cōmend in committing diuers thinges to writing not vnfruitful to be knowne or vnpleasant to be read yet it lamented me to see in theyr Monumentes the principall poyntes which chiefly concerned the state of Christes Church and were most necessary of all christen people to be knowne either altogether pretermitted or if any mention thereof were inserted yet were all things drawn to the honor specially of the Church of Rome or els to the fauor of theyr owne sect of Religion Wherby the vulgare ●ort hearing and reading in theyr writinges no other church mentioned or magnified but onely that Church which here florished in this world in riches and iollity were drawne also to the same persuasion to thinke no other Church to haue stand in all the earth but onely the Church of Rome In the number of this sort of writers besides our Monkes of England for euery Monastery almost had his Chronicler I might also recite both Italian and other countrey authors as Platina Sabellicus Nauclerus Martinus Antoninus Vincētius Onuphrius Laziardus Georgius Lilius Pollid Virgilius with many more who taking vpon thē to intermeddle with matters of the church although in part they expresse some truth in matters concerning the Bishops and sea of Rome yet in suppressing an other part they play with vs as Ananias and Saphira did with their mony or as Apelles did in Pliny who painting the one halfe of Venus comming out of the sea left the other halfe vnperfect So these writers while they shew vs one half of the B. of Rome the other halfe of him they leaue vnperfect vtterly vntold For as they paynt him out on the one part glistering in welth and glorye in shewing what succession the Popes had from the chaire of S. Peter when they first began and how long they sate what Churches and what famous buildings they erected how farre theyr possessions reached what lawes they made what councels they called what honour they receiued of Kynges and Emperours what Princes and Countryes they brought vnder theyr authority with other like stratagemes of great pompe and royalty so on the other side what vices these Popes brought with them to theyr seat what abhominatiōs they practised what superstition they mainteined what Idolatry they procured what wicked doctrine they defended contrary to the expresse word of God to what heresies they fell into what diuision of sectes they cut the vnity of christian Religion how some practised by Simony some by Necromancy and Sorcery some by poysoning some indenting with the Deuill to come by theyr Papacy what hypocrisy was in theyr liues what corruptiō in theyr doctrine what warres they raysed what bloudshed they caused what treachery they trauersed agaynst their Lordes and Emperours imprisoning some betraying some to the Templaryes and Saracēs in bringing other vnder theyr feet also in beheading some as they did with Fredericus and Conradinus the heires and ofspring of the house of Fredericus
Church of Rome now beyng hath no cōformitie with the old Romane Churche heretofore For then Byshops debated all causes of fayth onely by the Scriptures and other questions of Ecclesiasticall discipline they determined by the Canōs not of the Pope but of the Church such as were decreed by the auncient Councels as writeth Greg. Turonensis in Francorum historia Where as now both the rule of scripture sanctions of the old Councels set aside all thynges for the most part are decided by certaine new decretall or rather extradecr●tall extrauagant constitutions in the Popes Canon law compiled and in his Consistories practised And where as the old ordinaunce and disposition as well of the common law as of the sacred Coūcels and institution of auncient fathers haue geuen to Byshops other prelates also to patrons and donors of Ecclesiastical benefices euery one within his owne precinct and dominion also to cathedrall Churches and other to haue their free elections to prosecute the same in full effect ordryng and disposing promotions collatiōs prouisions dispositions of prelacies dignities and all other Ecclesiasticall benefices whatsoeuer after their owne arbitremēt as appeareth by the first generall Councell of Fraunce 16. q 7. cap. Omnes Basilicae by the first generall Councell of Nice cap 6. Also by the generall Councell of Antioche cap. 9. and is to be seene in the Popes Decrees 9. q. 3. Per singulas And also beside these auncient decrees the same is confirmed agayne in more latter yeares by Ludouicus the ninth French kyng in his constitution called Pragmatica sanctio made and prouided by full Parliament agaynst the popes exactions An. 1228. in these wordes as folow Item exaction●s onera grauissima pecuniarum per curiam Romanam Ecclesiae regni nostri impositas vel imposita quibus regnum miserabiliter de pauperatum existit siue etiam imponendas vel imponenda leuari aut colligi nullatenus volumus nisi duntaxat pro rationabili pia vrgentissima causa vel ineuitabili necessitate ac etiam de expresso spontaneo iussu nostro ipsius Ecclesiae regni nostri c. that is Item all exactions importable burdens of money which the Court of Rome hath layd vpon the Church of our kingdome whereby the said our kingdome hath bene miserably hetherto impouerished or hereafter shall impose or lay vpon vs we vtterly discharge and forbyd to be leuied or collected hereafter for any maner of cause vnlesse there come some reasonable godly most vrgent ineuitable necessitie that also not to be done without the expresse voluntary commaundement of vs of the Church of the same our foresayd kingdome c. Now contrary and agaynst to these so manifest expresse decrementes of generall Councels constitutions Synodall this latter Church of Rome of late presūption degeneratyng frō all the steppes of their elders haue taken vpon them a singular iurisdiction by them selues for their owne aduauntage to entermedle in disposing trāsposing Churches Colledges Monasteries with the collations exemptions elections goodes landes to the same belongyng by reason and exāple wherof haue come in these impropriations first fruites reseruations of benefices to the miserable dispoyling of Parishes horrible decay of Christen fayth which thynges amōg the old Romaine elders were neuer knowē For so much then did it lacke that due necessities were pluckt frō the Church that Emperours Kyngs Princes plucking frō their owne rather did cumulate the Church with superfluities Agayne when such goodes were geuen to the Church by those auncetors they were neither so geuen nor yet taken to serue the priuate vse of certaine churchmen takyng no paynes therein but rather to serue the publique subuētiō of the needy as is cōteined in the canonicall institutiōs by the Emperour Ludouicus Pius set forth An. 830. The wordes be these Res Ecclesiae vota sunt fidelium pretia peccatorum patrimonia pauperum that is The goods of the church be the vowes and bequestes of the faythfull prices to raunsome such as be in captiuitie or prison and patrimonies to succour them with hospitalitie that be needy Wherunto agreeth also the testimony of Prosper whose wordes be these Viros sanctos ecclesiae non vendicas●e vt proprias sed vt commendatas pauperibus diuisisse that is good men tooke the goodes of the church not as their own but distributed thē as geuē bequeathed to the poore And sayth moreouer Quod habet Ecclesia cum omnibus nihil habentibus habet commune that is Whatsoeuer the church hath it hath it common with all such as haue nothyng c. Adde to these the worthy testimony of S. August ad Bonif Si autem priuatim quae nobis sufficiant possidemus nō sunt illa nostra sed pauperum quorum procurationem quodammodo gerimus non proprietatem nobis vsurpatione damnabili vendicamus c. Likewise vowsons and pluralities of benefices were thyngs then as much vnknowen as now they are pernitious to the church taking away all free election of ministers from the flocke of Christ. All which inconueniences as they first came and crept in chiefly by the pretensed authoritie iurisdiction abused in this latter church of Rome so it can not be denyed but the sayd latter church of Rome hath taken and attributed to it selfe much more thē either the limites of Gods word do geue or standeth with the example of the old Romane church in these three thynges especiall Whereof as mentiō is touched before so briefly I will recapitulate the same The first is in this that whatsoeuer the Scripture geueth and referreth either to the whole church vniuersally or to euery particular church seuerally this church now of Rome doth arrogate to it selfe absolutely and onely both doyng iniury to other churches also abusing the Scriptures of God For albeit the Scripture doth geue authoritie to binde and loose it limitteth it neither to person nor place that is neither to the Citie of Rome onely more thē to other Cities nor to the sea of Peter more thē to other Apostles but geueth it clearely to the Church wherof Peter did beare the figure so that where soeuer the true Church of Christ is there is annexed power to bynde loose geuen and taken meerly as from Christ and not mediatly by the Pope or Byshop of Peters sea The second poynt wherein this present Churche of Rome abuseth his iurisdiction contrary to Scripture and steps of the old Romane Church is this for that it extendeth his authoritie farther and more amply thē either the warrant of the word or example of time will giue For although the Churche of Rome hath as other particular churches haue authoritie to binde and absolue yet it hath no such authoritie to absolue subiectes frō their othe subiection and loyaltie to their rulers Magistrates to dispēse with periury to denounce
prison and after burned at Auinion Anno. 1354. Ex Ionn Prosiardo volu 1. cap. 211. Ex scripta Godfri de Fontanis A contention in France betwene the Prelates and the Friers there A sermon of the Bish. of Byters to the students of Paris agaynst the Friers That is the Dominicke Friers and the Franciscane Friers The constitution of Pope Innocent 3. Omnis vtriusque sexus The Friers priuilegies proued contrary to the Popes constitution The Bish. Ambianensis Friers ought not to preach in Churches without special licence of them to whom the church belongeth The Friers reply against the Prelates Herode and Pilate were made friends in crucifying of Christ. An other sermon against the Friers Bishop Ambianensis In veritates c. Veritie in three partes consisteth The Friers proued with a lye The Friers priuilegies confuted in disputation at Paris A seditious commotion betweene the townes men and the scholers in the vniuersitie of Oxforde Procession for peace The holie procession would bring no peace Transubstātiation will not helpe in time of need A conquest of the scholers of Oxforde The vniuersitie of Oxford dissolued for a tyme. The towne of Oxford interdicted Chaunted to the Commissary of Oxford to haue the al ife of bread and ale and other priuilegies aboue the Maior of the towne An holsome decree of a good Archb. not to abstaine from bodely labour vpon certaine holy dayes A parliament Simon Sudbury Archb. of Cant. The Nuns of S. Bridges order This Ladye Blanch was Duckesse of Lancaster Dead men excommunicated by the Pope The Popes messengers hanged The feast of the speare and of the holy nailes En histor Criekladensis 46. Bonifacius 25. An vntruth in Polyd. Virgil. This Adam Mirimouth was compiler of the story of K. Edw. The first great plague in England The vestmēts wherin S. Peter sayd Masse or els the papists doe lye Canterbury Colledge builded in Oxforde The conclusion of this booke Antichrist in his pride The loosing out of Sathan The fift booke The yeares and tyme of loosing out Satan examined Apoc. 10. The place of the Apocal 20. Expounded for the loosing out of Satā What the loosing of Satan doth meane in Scripture Three reasons The first reason The 2. reason The 3. reason Apoc. cap. 13. Xlij monethes in the Apocal. cap. 13. examined What time Satan was tied vp About what time and yeare Satan was let out by the coūt of the Apocalips The ceasing of persecution in the primitiue church The binding vp of Sathan The time of losing of Sathan The time of Antichrist examined Verses prophesying of the comming of Antichrist The argument of the bookes after folowing Anno. 1360. A brief rehearsall of faythfull learned men which withstood the proceedings of the Pope The author of the plowmans prayer not knowne An olde booke intituled the ploughmans prayer written as seemeth about Wickliffes tyme. The complaynt of Esal applied to these times * Forward that is couenant The law of Christ standeth on two partes * Amid Paradise that is in the middest of Paradise Abraham * Held him forwarde that is kept promise with him Gods loue to man Feile times that is oft tymes Special precepts or lessons of the Gospell Christes sheepe stopped from cleane water compelled to drinke puddel * Syth that is afterward * Binemen that is take away * Herying that is wor●hipping The honouring of God standet● in i●● ●hing●● * Nemeth that is taketh Against anricular confession Sinnes forgiuen without ●hrist * Heigheth that is exalteth Obiection of the priestes to maintain ●hrist Answere to the obiection Penaunce for sinne is mans ordinance and not Gods Mischiefes that come by auricular confession Popish priestes charged wich Simony * Beth that is bee * By nemet's that is taketh away The Pop● breaketh the law of loue mercye The Pope would be a father but he beareth no loue To forsake the world is not to liue in ease from company True seruice of God stādeth not in long prayer but in keeping Gods commandements * Chargen that is they care for * Behited that is promised * Kunnen that is they can * Heryeth that is worshippeth Singing in churches falsly called Gods seruice Weping for sinnes better seruice then singing in church The order of p●●estes not made to offer Christs bodie The sacrament of the body of the Lord abused * Fullen that is baptise Priests principally sent to preach not to say masse or to make the lords bodie He that speaketh Gods teaching is holden an heretike What inconuenience by the vnmaried liues of priestes He complain●th of the idlenes of priestes What is the true church of Christ. * To fore ●hat is before * Herying that is worshipping * Heriers worshippers He complaineth of images in churches He cōplayneth of false pastors that liue by their Booke but feedeth not them * Lesew that is pasture * Beth that is bee Against hirelings * Sweuens that is dreames * Bliue quickly * Meste most Popish priests neither reach themselues nor wyl suffer other beside thēselues to teach * I hightest promised * We●en know * Tweyne that is two * For that i but. He complaineth for punishing litle faults and to l●t great faul●es escape If he be an heretike that breaketh mans lawe what is the P. that breaketh Gods lawe A leud mā that is a lay man Against the canon law The popes l●w against Gods lawe in causing men to accuse themselues Mowē that is may Tooke kept that is tooke heede The breakyng of the popes lawe more punished then the breaking of Gods law For to that that is therfore Pilate more commended then the pope The Pope breaketh patience Christes vicare and his priestes will suffer nothing No temporall word geuen to Peter Thilk things those things faith commeth not by outward force Pope breaketh the rule of charitie of mercy and of patience Or then before that The P. breaketh the law of swearing Nole 1. would not Seruant of seruants the popes stile abused Thralles that is to say bond men Pride of priests Meekenes commended in Ministers Vicar in earth not tollerable in the pope Swe●●ens that that is dreames Mastership and Lordship in Preachers False glosers Nele that is will not Pouertie of Christ not folowed Couetise Pouertie counted s●lly Nele th●● will not God is serued of the worst A lesson for them that haue goods well to spel them Seggen that is do say The pouertie of Christ rightly considered A poore kyng and a proud Vicar howe ioyne these two together Christ a seruant vpon earth the pope a Lord. The pope for his right and riches wil pleade fight and curse Propriety of goods here ● not take away but charitie is required to helpe the neede of our neighbour The Pope a mainteyner of theeues and robbers Christ a good shepeheard in d●●●e Comparison betweene the popes sheepheards and Christ. * But for that is but because * Within forth i. inwardly * Lesew
Henr. Coldyron answereth to the 3. article Iohn Pollomarius answereth to the 4. article Certayne chosen on both sides to determine the matter The oration of Cardinal 〈◊〉 Nicolas the 2. propounder charged by the Cardinall for the commēcing of Ioh. Wickliffe A prudent answere of the Bohemians to the Cardinall Iulian. The Ambassadours of the Bohemians return without agreement The cōming of the Legates to Prage Ioh. Rochezanus speaketh Ex Cochleo hist. lib. 7. Polomas answereth to the Bohemians The Bohemians reply againe to Polomar Polomar extolleth the Councelles Generall councelles may erre and haue erred Ex Cochleo hist. lib. 7. The Ambassadours of the councel and the Bohemians could not agree A declaration of 3. articles promised to the Bohemians by the Councell A declaration of the Councell to the Bohemians concernyng the first 3. articles The 2. proposition propounded by the Bohemians with the declaration from the Councell Punishing of publicke offences how and by whom Note here the popes addition The 3. article of the Bohemians with the declaration from the councell Liberty of preaching how farre and to whom at extendeth The 4. article of the Bohemians with the declaration from the Councell Temporal possessions in the clergie mens handes The papists stād hard for their temporal Lordships The Bohemians take a deliberatiō of the fourth article A declaration of the councel touching the fourth article of the communion Consecrat dist 2 quia pissus This is to set vp the church aboue the scripture The holie communion requireth amendment of lyfe Holy things nothing profit the wicked The reuerēt receiuing of the sacraments Receiuing vnder one kinde for auoiding two perils Error grounded vpon errour Causes why to minister vnder one kinde Receiuing in both kindes permitted to the Bohemians The condition annexed Doubtes or questions of the Bohemians Aunswere Permission of both kindes granted to the Bohemians not of sufferance but by full authoritie Punishing of offences considered How and by whom offēders ought to be punished To doe that God commaundeth is obedience and no sin though it be extraordinary The Israelites dyd steale from the Egyptians without sinne Sampson killed himselfe without sinne Of extraordinary commaundementes no generall lawes to be made Obiection Aunswere How the laitie hath power ouer the clergie and wherin The Pope wil be iudged by his own law Obiection Aunswere Obiection Aunswere Abuse of prelates in inhibiting true preachers Remedie of appeale Obiection Aunswere Actes of secular dominion to be exercised of the clergie after a double respecte ●el per se ●el per alium Obiection Aunswere Coactiue power whether in belongeth to the clergie and how The goods of the church in whose possession they be properly 12. q. 1 cap. expedit The clergie be administratours not Lordes of the temporalties of the Church The agreement betweene the Bohemians and the Councell Anno. 1438. Certaine petitions of the Bohemians put vp to the Coūcell Anno. 1438. The communiō in both kindes to be generally graunted To haue a good and lawfull pastor and Bishop Free communiō vnder both kindes to be permitted to all princes The Gospells Epistles to be read in the vulgare tongue The scriptures read in the Slauons tongue of olde time Incorporations to be graunted to vniuersities an vnlawfull request A request for necessary reformation discipline The cōception of our Lady brought into the Church The visitation of our Lady brought in Vowsons giftes of benefices before they were voide debarred by the coūcell which vowsons here ar called expectatiue graces Incōueniēces that rise by vowsons of benefices No controuersies to be brought to Rome beyond 4. daies iourney from thence No f●●uolous appeales to be made to the Pope Against the superfluous number of errours Against the popes first fruites Pragmatica Sancti● per Carolum 7. An Acte made for the conuersion of the Iewes An Acte for studying the Hebrue Latine and Chaldey Against priestes that kept Concubines An Epistle of Martin Meyr to Aeneas Siluius translated into Englishe the ●atine wher of inextant in the former edition of this booke Ex Orth. Grat. The corruption of the Church of Rome detected The authoritie of the councell of Basill expended The epistle of the Cardinall Iulian to the Pope in the commendation of the councell of Basill Thambassadors of the Councell are returned from Egra What the church is Eugenius prouoketh the Church A strong argument against Eugenius The cause of the long delay of the Prelates The councel of Sene. An epistle of Eneas Siluius in defence of the councell of Basill The t●●●nal seate standeth not in one Bishop The authoritie of the Councell of Basill maintained by the Emperour and the French king so long as they liued The practise of Pope Eugenius to vndoe the Councell of Basill The Pope stirreth vp warre The Dolphin driue● away by a few Germaines The dissolution of tho Councell of Basill Fredericke of Austrich crowned Emperour great grand father to this Ferdinando The Lega● of the Greekes cōdescend first to the popes law The Greeke Churches refuse the Popes doctrine The inconuenience of discorde Ex Cochleo lib. 8. hist. Hussit Ex Antonin 3. part tit Ex hist. Cas pari Peucer lib. 5. Maruelous feare fallen vpon the popes army Gods holy angels pitch their tentes about them which feare him Psal. The cruell deceite and wicked facte of Mainardus against the souldiours of Boheme Certaine thousandes of the Bohemiā souldiors brent Ex Aenea Silu. lib. de hist. Boem cap. 51. England nōted of crueltie Burning slaying in England Anno 1439. R. Wiche Priest Martir Ex Fabian part 7. Ex antiquo alio Chronico Ex Regist. Hen. Chicheslei The bishops cōsult to abolish the lawe of Premuniri facias The king aunswere to the bill of the Clergy touching the law of Premuniri A briefe aunswere to Cope concerning Lady Eleanor Cobham To the third obiection Vid. Centu. 8. Ral. ca. 4. To the 4. obiection M. Coperay leth without a cause See the former edition pag. 371. The 5. obiection The story of the Ladie Eleanor and Rog. Onley here pretermitted A question whether Eleanor the Duches was culpable in treason agaynst the king Certaine coniectures of the crime not to bee true 1. Coniecture 2 Coniecture 3 Coniecture 4 Coniecture 5. Coniecture 6. Coniecture 7 Coniecture 8. Coniecture 9. Coniecture 10. Coniecture A briefe aunswer to Maister Copes cauillations concerning Duke Humfreyes wyfe The contention betwene the Cardinall of Wint. Duke Humfrey Lorde protectour Anno. 1440. E● Polyc●ra Wint. presumeth to be Cardinall against the minde of his king Wint. incurreth the law of premuni●i Wint. intrudeth himselfe to be the kings gouernour The Cardinall defraudeth the king of his iewels The Cardinall deliuereth the K. of Scottes vpon his owne authoritie The Cardinall playeth the marchant The Cardinall a defrauder of the king The Cardinall taketh vpon him like a king The Cardinall traytour to the crowne The Card. a purchaser of of the king● landes Peruerse counsa●le of
speedely gathered into the ●arne whiche onely remayneth behinde to come Now if we ascribe such reputation to Godly preachers and worthely which diligently preache the Gospell of Christ when they liue notwithstanding by the benefite of tyme without all feare of persecution howe muche more reasonable cause haue we to prayse and extoll such men as stoutly spend theyr lyues for the defence of the same All these premisses duely of our partes considered and marked seeing we haue found so famous Martyrs in this our age let vs not fayle then in publishing and setting forth their doings lest in that poynt we seeme more vnkinde to them then the writers of the primitiue Church were vnto theirs And though we repute not theyr ashes chaynes and swerdes in the stede of reliques yet let vs yeld thus much vnto theyr commemoration to glory the Lord in hys Saintes and imitate theyr death as much as we may with like constancy or theyr liues at the least with like innocency They offered theyr bodies willing to the rough handling of the tormentors And is it so great a matter then for our part to mortifie our flesh with all the members thereof They neglected not onely the riches and glory of the world for the loue of Christ but also their liues and shal we then keepe so great a styrre one agaynst an other for the transitory trifles of this world They continued in patient suffering when they had most wrong done vnto them and when theyr very heartes bloud gushed out of theyr bodyes and yet will not wee forgeue our poore brother be the iniury neuer so small but are ready for euery trifling offence to seeke hys destruction and cut his throat They wishing well to all men did of theyr own accord forgeue theyr persecutors therefore ought we which are now the posteritie and Children of Martyrs not to degenerate from theyr former steps but being admonished by their examples if we cannot expresse theyr charitie toward all men yet at lest to imitate the same to our power and strength Let vs geue no cause of offence to any And if any be geuen to vs let vs ouercome it with patience forgeuing and not reuenging the same And let vs not onely keepe our handes from shedding of bloud but our tongues also from hurting the same of others Besides let vs not shrinke if case so require martyrdome or losse of lyfe according to their example to yeld vp the same in the defence of the Lordes flocke Whiche thing if men would do much lesse contention and busines woulde be in the world ●hen now is And thus much touching the vtilitie and fruit to be taken of this history To all the professed frendes and followers of the Popes proceedinges foure Questions propounded TO you all and singuler which professe the doctrine and Rel●gion of the Pope your holy Father and of your mother Church of Rome pretending the name of Catholickes commōly termed Papistes wheresoeuer abiding in the Realme of England these foure Questions or Problemes hereunder folowing I would moue desiring you all either to muse vpon thē or to answere thē at your leisure * The first Question FIrst forsomuch as Mount Sion which God calleth by the Prophet Iesai the hill of his holines beareth in the scripture an vndoubted type of the spiritual church of Christ for so much as the sayd Iesai. ca. 11. 65. prophesying of the sayd Mount Sion sayth in these wordes Non nocebunt neque affligent in omni monte sancto meo dicit Dominus c. 1. They shal not kill nor hurt in all my holy hill sayth the Lord. c. And agayne in the same chap. thus we read Habitabit Lupus cum agno Pardus cū haedo accubabit Vitulus Leo ouis vna commorabuntur puellus paruulus ducet eos c. i. The wolfe shall dwell with the Lambe the Leopard with the Kid the Calfe the Lion the sheepe shall feed together a yong child shall rule thē The Cow also the Beare shall abide together with theyr yong ones the Lion shall eat chaffe fodder like the Oxe c. Upon these premises now foloweth my question how the church of Rome can be answerable to this hill of Siō seing in the sayd church of Rome is and hath bene now so many yeares such killing and slaying such cruelty and tyranny shewed such burning spoyling of christen bloud such malice mischiefe wrought as in reading these historyes may to all the world appeare To this if they aunswere expound these wordes of the Prophet as perteining to the church triumphant therevnto I reply agayne that by the wordes in the same place in the same sentence expressed that sence cannot stand for as much as the Prophet in the very same place where he prophesieth of this peaceable dwelling in Gods holy mountayne without hurting or killing meaneth plainly of the earth sheweth also the cause of that godly peace Because sayth he the earth is replenished with knowledge science of the Lord. c. ibid. And furthermore the Prophet speaking of the same day when this shal be addeth saying In that day the root of Iesse shall stand for a signe to the people for the Gentils to be conuerted and to seeke vnto him c. Which day in no wise can be applyed to the church in heauen triumphant but only here militant in earth Touching which place of Iesai further here is to be noted by the way that by this peaceable Moūt Sion which comprehendeth both the states as well ecclesiasticall as tēporall is not restrayned the publicke penalty of good lawes needfull to be executed vpon publicke malefactors but here is restrayned the fiercenes reuenge cruelty violence of mens affections To which affectiōs men being commonly subiect by nature through grace working of the gospel are altered reformed chaūged to another disposition frō stoutnes to softnes frō violence to sufferance from fiercenes to forbearing frō pride to humility frō cruelty to compassion from wilynes to simplicity frō solemne singularity to humanity and meekenes Which vertues if they had bene in the church of Rome according to the rule of S. Paul which willeth men that be stronger to beare with the infirmities of the weaker and that in the spirit of meeknes c. Rom. 15. Gal. 6. I should not haue needed now at this time to write such a long history as this of the suffering of so many Martyrs ¶ The second Question MY second question is this to demaūd of you catholicke professors of the popes sect which so deadly maligne and persecute the protestants professing the gospell of Christ what iust or reasonable cause haue you to allege for this your extreme hatred ye bear vnto the y● neither you your selues can abide to liue with them nor yet will suffer the other to liue amongest you If they were Iewes
will not name And here now commeth in the Argument of Pighius Hosius and Eccius to be aunswered vnto who arguyng for the antiquitie and authoritie of the Church of Rome reason on this maner Da That for somuch as an ordinary a knowen Church visible must here be knowen cōtinually on earth during frō the time of the Apostles to the which church all other Churches must haue recourse xi And seeyng then there is no other Church visible orderly known to haue indured from the Apostles time but onely the Church of Rome j. They conclude therfore that the Church of Rome is that Church wherunto all other Churches must haue their recourse c. To the which Paralogisme I aūswere thus that this word Durans Ecclesia the during Church in the Minor hath fallaciā aequiuoci For although the name of the Church and outward successiō of Byshops haue had their durance frō tyme of the Apostles yet the definition and matter which maketh a true Apostolicall church in deede and vniuocè neither is now in the church of Rome nor yet the forme institution of the church now vsed in Rome was euer frō the Apostles whiche Apostles were neuer Authors or fathers of this title iurisdictiō and doctrine now taught in Rome but rather were enemies euer to the same Agayne to the Maior which standeth vpon two partes I aunswere first although the necessitie of the churche duryng from the Apostles may and must be graūted yet the same necessitie was not boūd to any certaine place or persō but onely to fayth so that wheresoeuer that is to say in whatsoeuer congregation true fayth was there was the church of Christ And because the true fayth of Christ must needes euer remaine in earth therfore the Church also must needes remaine in earth And God forbid that the said true faith of Christ should only remaine in one citie in the world and not in other as well And therfore to the secōd part of the Maior is to be sayd that as this true and sincere fayth of Christ is not so geuen to remaine fixely in one place or citie alone so neither is there any one church in the world so ordained appointed of God that al other Churches should haue their recourse vnto it for determination of their causes and cōtrouersies incident c. And thus much to the Argument of Pighius and Hosius c. Now as touchyng the authorities allegations of the auncient Doctours and holy fathers in the commēdation of the Church of Rome here commeth in also to be noted that whosoeuer will vnderstand rightly their authorities and aūswere to the same must first learne to make a difference and distinction of the sayd Church of Rome frō that it was to that it is for as much as the Church of Rome is not the same Church now which it was then but onely aequiuocè otherwise as touching the very propertie and definition of a Church it is an other Church and nothing agreing to that was then saue onely in outward name and place therefore by this distinction made I aunswere the place of Irenaeus Cyprianus and other famous Doctours commendyng the Church of Rome as Catholicke and Apostolicall and say that these Doctours speakyng of the Church of Rome which then was sayd not vntrue calling it Catholicke Apostolicall for that the same Church tooke their ordinary succession of Byshops ioyned with the ordinary doctrine and institution frō the Apostles but speakyng of the Church of Rome whiche now is we say the sayd places of the Doctours are not true neither doe appertaine to the same all which Doctours neither knew the Churche of Rome that now is neither if they had would euer haue iudged any thyng therein worthy such commendation Ouer and besides our aduersaries yet more obiect agaynst vs who heauing and shouyng for the antiquitie of the Romish Churche for lacke of other sufficient reason to proue are driuen to fall in scannyng the tymes and yeares What say they where was this Church of yours before these fiftie yeares To whom briefly to aunswere first we demaund what they meane by this which they call our Church If they meane the ordinaunce and institution of doctrine and Sacramentes now receaued of vs and differing from the Church of Rome we affirme and say that our church was when this church of theirs was not yet hatched out of the shell nor did yet euer see any light that is in the time of the Apostles in the primitiue age in the tyme of Gregorie the first the old Romane church when as yet no vniuersall pope was receiued publikely but repelled in Rome nor this fulnesse of plenary power yet knowen nor this doctrine and abuse of Sacramentes yet heard of In witnes wherof we haue the old actes and histories of aūcient tyme to geue testimony with vs wherein sufficiēt matter we haue for vs to declare the same forme vsage and institution of this our church reformed now not to be the begynnyng of any new church of our owne but to be the renewyng of the old aūcient church of Christ nor to be any sweruyng from the church of Rome but rather a reducyng to the church of Rome Whereas contrary the churche of Rome whiche now is is nothyng but a sweruyng from the churche of Rome as partly is declared and more shall appeare Christ willyng hereafter And where the sayd our aduersaries doe moreouer charge vs with the fayth of our fathers and Godfathers wherein we were baptised accusing and cōdemnyng vs for that we are now reuolted frō them their fayth wherin we were first Christened To this we aūswere that we beyng first baptised by our fathers Godfathers in water in the name of the Father of the Sonne of the holy Ghost the same fayth wherin we were Christened thē we do retaine because our Godfathers were thē selues also in the same fayth therfore they cā not say that we haue forsaken the fayth of our Godfathers c. As for other points of Ecclesiasticall vses circumstaunces cōsidered besides the principall substaunce of fayth and baptisme if they held any thyng whiche receaded from the doctrine and rule of Christ therein we now remoue our selues not because we would differ from them but because we would not with them remoue from the rule of Christes doctrine Neither doth the Sacramēt of our baptisme binde vs in all points to the opiniōs of them that baptised vs but to the fayth of him in whose name we were Baptised For as if a man were Christined of an heretique the Baptisme of him notwithstandyng were good although the Baptiser were nought so if our Godfathers or fathers which Christened vs were taught any thyng not consonant to Christiā doctrine in all pointes neither is our Baptisme worsse for that nor yet we boūd to folow thē in all thynges wherein they them selues did not
worthye their vocation to laye downe their olde conuersation to gyue theyr members seruauntes of ryghteousnes to offer their bodyes vppe to God a liuelye Sacrifice c. The like example of whose teachyng if the Churches nowe reformed doe not folowe let their Sermons their Preachynges wrytinges exhortynges and lyues also beare recorde who although they can not say with Christ. Which of you can blame me of sinne yet they may say to the aduersaryes whosoeuer of you is wythout fault cast the fyrst stone of reproch agaynst vs. Wherefore Hosius Pighius wyth their fellowes doe them open wrong and slaunderously belye them in comparing them in this behalfe to Aetius Eunominus and other heretikes called Anomaei who taking the good sentences of S. Paule did abuse the same to filthy licence of the flesh and corruption of wicked life c. But to let these slaunders passe nowe what the errours be of the Church of Rome touching this part of doctryne remayneth to be declared Whose errour first standeth in this that they mysunderstanding the definition of good workes doe call good workes not such as properly are commaunded by the lawe of God but such as are agreable to the Popes law As buylding of Abbayes and churches gyuing to the high altar founding of trentales fynding of chauntries gylding of Images hearing of Masses going on pilgrimage fyghting for the holye crosse keeping of vowes entryng to orders fastyng of vigiles creepyng to the Crosse praying to Saintes c. All which are not onely reputed for good workes but so preferred also before all other workes that to these is gyuen pardon from the Pope double and triplefolde more then to any other good worke of charitie commaunded in the law of almightie God An other errour also may be noted in the Papists touching the efficient or formall cause of good workes For albeit they all confesse in their bookes that Gratia dei gratis data is the chiefe principall cause thereof and worketh in vs iustitiam primam as they call it yet the good workes after regeneration they refer to other subordinate causes vnder God as to fre wil or to habitum virtutis or ad integra naturalia nothing at all to faith when as faith onelye next vnder God is the roote and fountaine of all well dooyng as in the fruites of a good tree albeit the planter or the husbandman be the principall agent thereof and some cause also may be in the good ground yet the next and immediate cause is the roote that maketh the tree fruitefull In like maner the grace of God in a soft repentaunt mollified hart planteth the gift of fayth Fayth as a good roote can not lye dead or vnoccupied but springeth foorth and maketh both the tree fruitefull and also the tree thereof to be good which otherwise had no acceptatiō nor goodnes in them were it not for the goodnes of the roote from whence they spring So Paule although he had certeine workes in him such as they were before his conuersion yet had he no good workes before the grace of Christ had rooted fayth in him So Mary Magdelene the sinner and Zacheus the Publicane So all the nations of the Gentiles began to bryng foorth frute and especially good fruit when they began to bee ingrafted in Christ and to receaue the roote of hys fayth whose fruites before that were all damnable and vnsauery As touchyng the cause therefore of good workes there is no other in man but fayth whose office as it is to iustifie vs in heauen so the nature of it is here in earth to worke by loue as the roote worketh by the sappe For as a man seeth and feeleth by fayth the loue and grace of God toward him in Christ his sonne so begynneth he to loue agayne both God and man and to doe for his neyghbour as God hath done to him And hereof properly springeth the runyng fountaine of al good works and deedes of charitie Thirdly as they erre in the cause of good works so do they erre much more in the ende of the lawe and of good workes for where Saint Paule teacheth the lawe to be gyuen to thys vse and ende to conuict our transgressions to prooue vs sinners to shewe and condemne our infirmitye and to dryue vs to Christ they take and applye no other ende to the lawe but to make vs perfect to keepe vs from wrath and to make vs iust before God And likewise where Saint Paule prooueth al our good works to be vnperfect and vtterly secludeth them from the ende of Iustifying they contrariwise doe teache as though the ende of good workes were to merite remission of synnes to satisfye vnto God to deserue grace to redeeme soules from Purgatory and that by them the person of the regenerate man doth please God and is made iust before God For so they teach most wickedly and horribly saying That christ suffered for originall sinne or sinnes going before Baptisme but the actuall sinnes which followe after Baptisme must be done away by mens meryts And so they assigne to Christ the begynning of saluation or obteyning of the fyrst grace as they call it but the perfection or cōsūmation of grace they giue to works our own strēgth Neither can they in any case abide that we be iustified frely by the mercy of God through fayth onely apprehending the merites of Christ. Howbeit neyther doe all Papistes in this their erroue agree in one For some make distinction and say that we are iustified by Christ principaliter .i. principally minus principaliter .i. lesse principally by the dignitie of our owne deedes contrary to the eight principle before mentioned page 24. Other holde that we are made ryghteous before God not by works that go before fayth but by our vertues that follow after Some againe do thus expound the saying of Saint Paule We are iustified by faith that is say they by fayth preparing vs or setting vs in a good way to be iustified Other expoūde by it the figure Sinecdoche that is by faith conioyned together with other vertues Other thus by faith that is being formed with charytie c. Thus all these doe derogate from the benefite of Christ and attribute vnto works a great or the greatest part of our iustification directly against the true veine of Saint Paules doctryne and first institucion of the auncient Church of Rome and against all the principles of holy Scripture Furthermore as touching the sayde doctryne of the lawe and good workes they erre in misunderstanding the nature of the lawe and workes For where Saint Paule disputeth that the lawe is spirituall and requireth of vs perfect obedience of the whole power of man which wee beyng carnall are neuer able to accomplish they affirme otherwise that the lawe doth require but onely outward obedience of man and therewith is contented And this obedience they say man is not onely able
excommunicate all those Byshops and churches of Asia as heretickes and schismatickes which disagreed from the Romaine order had not Irenaeus otherwise restrayned him from that doyng as is a foresayd whiche was about the yeare of our Lord .191 in the reigne of Commodus Thus then began the vniformitie of keeping that holy day to be first required as a thing necessary all they accompted as heretickes and schismatickes which dissented from the Bishop traditiō of Rome With Victor stoode Theophilus Byshop of Cesar●a Narcissus of Hierusalem Irenaeus of Lyons Palmas of Pontus Banchillus of Corinthe the Byshop of D●●roena and other moe All which condescended to haue the celebration of Easter vpon the Sonday because they would differ frō the Iewes in all things as neare as they might and partly because the resurrection of the Lord fell on the same day On the contrary side diuers Byshop were in Asia of whom the principall was Policrates Byshop of Ephesus who being assembled with a great multitude of Bishops and brethren of those parties by the common assent of the rest wrote agayne to Victor and to the Church of Rome declaring that they had euer from the beginning obserued that day according to the rule of Scripture vnchaunged neither adding nor altering any thing frō the same Alledging moreouer for them the examples of the Apostles and holy fathers their predecessours as Phillip the Apostle with hys three daughters at Hierapolis also Iohn the Apostle and Euangelist at Ephesus Polycarpus at Smyrna Thraseas at Eumenia Byshoppe and Martyr lykewise of Sagaris at Laodicaea Byshop and Mattyr Holy Papyrius and Melito at Sardis Beside these bishops also of his own kindred and his owne aunceters to the number of seuen which all were bishops before him he the eight now after them All which obserued saith he the solemnitie of the same day after the same wi●e and sort as we do now Victor being not a litle mooued herewith by letters agayne denounceth against them more bold vpon authoritie then wi●e in his commission violent excommunicatiō Albeit by the wise handlyng of Irenaeus and other learned men that matter was staid and Victor otherwise perswaded What the perswasiōs of Irenaeus were partly may appeare in Euseb. Lib. 5. cap. 26. the summe whereof tendeth to this effect That the variance and difference of ceremonies is no straunge matter in the Church of Christ when as this varietie is not onely in the day of Easter but also in the maner of fasting in diuers other vsages among the christian For some fast one day some two days some other fast moe Other there be which counting xl houres both day night take that for a ful dayes fast And this so diuers fashion of fasting in the church of Christ began not onely in this our tyme but was before among our fore elders And yet notwithstanding they with all this diuersity were in vnitie among themselues and so be we neyther both this difference of ceremonies any thing hinder but rather commendeth the concorde of fayth And bringeth forth the examples of the fathers of Telesphorus Pius Anicetus Soter Eleutherius and such other who neither obserued the same vsage themselues neither prescribed it to others and yet notwithstanding kept christian charitie with such as came to cōmunicate with them not obseruing the same forme of things which they obserued as well appeared by Polycarpus and Anicetus which although they agreed not in one vniforme custome of rites yet refused not to cōmunicate together the one geuing reuerence vnto the other Thus the controuersie being taken vp betwene Irenaeus Victor remained free to the time of Nicene Councell Haec ex Iren. Eusebius And thus much cōcerning the controuersie of that matter and concerning the doings of Victor After Victor succeeded in the sea of Rome Zephyrinus in the dayes of the foresayd Seuerus about the yeare of our Lord .203 To this Zephyrinus be ascribed two Epistles in the first Tome of the Councels But as I haue sayd before of the decretall Epistles of other Romaine Bishops so I say and verily suppose of this that neither the countenāce of the stile nor the matter therin contained nor the condition of the ●yme doth otherwise giue to thinke of these letters but that they be verily bastard letters not written by these fathers nor in these tymes but craftily and wickedly pact in by some which to set vp the primacie of Rome haue most pestilently abused the authoritie of these holy auncient fathers to deceaue the simple Church For who is so rude but that in considering onely the state of those terrible tymes may easily vnderstand except affectiō blind him beside a nomber of other probable coniectures to lead him that the poore persecuted bishops in that time would haue bene glad to haue any safe couert to put their heades in so far was it of that they had any lust or laisure thē to seeke for any Primacie or Patriarkeship or to driue all other churches to appeale to the sea of Rome or to exempt all Priests from the accusation of any lay man as in the first Epistle of Zephyrinus is to be seene written to the Bishops of Sicilia And likewise the second Epistle of his to the Bishops of the prouince of Egypt containing no maner of doctrine nor consolation necessary for that time but only certain ritual decrees to no purpose argueth no lesse but the said epistles neither to sauor of that man nor taste of the tyme. Of like credite also seemeth the constitution of the Patines of glasse which Damasus sayth that the same Zephyrinus ordained to be caried before the Priest at the celebratiō of the Masse Againe Platina writeth that he ordayned the ministration of the Sacramēt to be no more vsed in vessels of wood or of glasse or of any other mettall except only siluer gold and tinne c. But how these two testimonies of Damasus and Platina ioyne together let the reader iudge especially seyng the same decree is referred to Vrbanus that came after him Againe what needed this decree of golden chalices to be stablished afterward in the Councell of Tybur and Rhenes if it had bene enacted before by Zephyrinus How long this Zephyrinus sate our writers do varie Eusebius sayth he died in the raigne of Caracalla and sate 17. yeares Platina writeth that he died vnder Seuerus and sate 8. yeares and so saith also Nauclerus Damasus affirmeth that he sate 16. yeares and two monthes Matthaeus author of the story intituled Flores Historiarū with other latter Chronicles maketh mention of Perpetua and Felicitas and Reuocatus her brother also of Saturninus and Satyrus brethren and Secundulus which in the persecution of this Seuerus gaue ouer their liues to Martyrdome for Christ beyng throwen to wild beasts and deuoured of the same in Carthage and in Affrike saue that Saturninus brought agayne from the beasts was
cap. 6. 10. And forasmuch as yee haue hearde the cruell Edict of Maximinus proclaymed against the Christians grauen in brasse which he thought perpetually should endure to the abolishing of Christ his Religion Now marke againe the great handy worke of God which immediatly fel vpon the same checking the proud presumption of the tyrant prouing al to be false and contrary that in the brasen Proclamation was contained For where the foresaide Edict boasted so much of the prosperitie and plentie of all things in the time of this persecution of the Christians sodenly befell such vnseasonable drought with famine and pestilēce among the people besides also the warres with the Armenians that all was founde vntrue that hee had bragged so much of before By reason of which famine and pestilence the people were greatly consumed in so much that one measure of wheat was sold for two thousand and fiue hundred peeces of money of Athens coyne by reason whereof innumerable died in the Cities but many more in the countrey and villages so that most part of the husbād men and countreymen died vp with the famine and pestilence Diuers there were which bringing out their best treasure were glad to geue it for any kinde of sustenāce were it neuer so litle Other selling away their possessions fel by reason thereof to extreme pouertie and beggary Certaine eating grasse and feeding on other vnholsome herbes were faine to relieue them selues with such foode as did hurt and poyson their dodies Also a number of women in the Cities being brought to extreeme miserie and penurie were constrained to depart the Citie and fal to begging through the coūtrey Some other were weake and faint as Images without breath wandring vp and downe not able to stand for feblenesse fel downe in the middle of the streetes and holding vp their handes most pitifull cried for some scrappes or fragments of bread to be geuen them being at the last gaspe ready to geue vp the Ghost and not able to vtter any other words yet cried out that they were hūgry Of the richer sort diuers there were who being weary with the number of beggers and askers after they had bestowed largely vpon them became hard harted fearing least they should fall into the same miserie themselues as they which begged By reason wherof the market place streetes lanes and alleis lay full of dead naked bodies being cast out and vnburied to the pitifull grieuous beholding of them that saw them Wherefore many were eaten of dogges for which cause they that liued fell to the killing of dogges least they running mad shoulde fall vpon them and kill them In like maner the pestilence scattering through all houses and ages of men did no lesse consume them especially those which through plēty of vitail escaped famine Wherfore the rich Princes Presidentes and other innumerable of the Magistrates being the more apt to receiue the infection by reason of their plēty were quickly dispatched and turned vp their heeles Thus the miserable multitude being consumed with famine and with pestilence all places was full of mourning neither was there any thing else seene but wailing and weeping in euery corner So that death what for famine and pestilence in short time brake vp and consumed whole housholdes two or three dead bodies being borne out together from one house to one funerall These were the rewards of the vaine bragges of Maximinus and his Edicts which he did publish in all townes and Cities against vs whē it was euident to al men how diligent and charitable the Christians were to them all in this their miserable extremitie For they onely in all this time of distresse shewing compassion vpō them trauelled euery day some in curing the sicke some in burying the dead which otherwise of their owne sort were forsaken Other some of the Christians calling and gathering the multitude together which were in ieopardie of famine distributed bread to them whereby they ministred occasion to all men to glorifie the God of the Christians and to confesse them to be the true worshippers of God as appeard by their workes By the meanes and reason hereof the great God and defender of the Christians who before had shewed his anger and indignation against al men for their wrongfull afflicting of vs opened againe vnto vs the comfortable light of his prouidence so that by meanes thereof peace fell vnto vs as light to them that sit in darknesse to the great admiration of all men which easely perceiue God himselfe to be a perpetuall director of our doings who many times chasteneth his people with calamities for a time to exercise them but after sufficient correction againe sheweth himselfe mercifull and fauourable to them which with trust call vpon him By the narration of these things heeretofore premised taken out of the storie of Eusebius like as it is manifest to see so is it wonderfull to marke and note how those counsailes and rages of the Gentiles atchieued against Christ and his Christians when they seemed most ●ure against them were most against them selues And whereby they thought most to confoūd the Church Religion of Christ the same turned most to their owne confusion and to the profite and praise of the Christians God of his marueilous wisedome so ordering disposing the end of things For where the brasen Edict of the Emperour promised temperate weather God sent drought where it promised plentie God immediatly sent vpon them famine and penurie where it promised health God stroke them euen vpon the same with grieuous pestilence and with other moe calamities in such sort that the most reliefe they had was chiefly by the Christians to the great praise both of them and to the honour of our God Thus most plainely and euidently was then verified the true promise of Christ to his Church affirming and assuring vs that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against his Church builded vpō his faith as sufficiently may appeare by these x. persecutiōs aboue specified and described Wherein as no man can deny but that Sathan his malignaunt world haue assayed the vttermost of their power and might to ouerthrow the Church of Iesus so must all men needes graunt that read these stories that when Sathan and the gates of hell haue done their worst yet haue they not preuailed against this mount of Sion nor euer shall For els what was here to be thought where so many Emperours and tyraunts together Dioclesian Maximinian Galerius Maximinus Seuerus Maxentius Licinius with their Captaines and officers were let loose like so many Lyons vpon a scattered and vnarmed flocke of sheepe intending nothing els but the vtter subuersion of all Christianitie and especially also when lawes were set vp in brasse against the Christians as a thing perpetually to stand what was here to be looked for but a finall desolation of the name and Religion of Christians But what
and such as be mad receiue their health agayne if they worship the tombe of this Elfleda c. The like fainings and monstrous miracles we reade also in chronicles of doting Dunstane drowned in all superstition if he were not also a wicked sorcerer First how he beyng yet a boy chased away the deuil set about with a great company of dogs and how the Angels did open the church dore for him to enter Then how the Lute or Harpe hanging vpon the wall did sing or play without any finger these wordes Gaudent in coelis animae sanctorum qui Christi vestigi● sunt sequuti qui pro eius amore sanguinem suum suderunt ideo cum Christo regnabunt in aeternum Item where a certayne great beame or maisterpost was ●●●ed out of the place he with making the signe of a Crosse set it in right frame agayne Moreouer how the sayd Dunstane being tempted vpon a tyme of the deuil with the cogitation of women caught the deuill by the nose with a whore paire of tongs and helde him fast Item how ofte heauenly spirits appeared to him and vsed to talke with him amiliarly Item how he prophesied of the birth of king Edgar of the death of king Egelred of the death of Editha and of Ethelwood bishop of Winchester Also how our Lady with her fellowes appeared visibly to hym singing this song Cantemus Domino sociae cantemus honorem Dulcis amor Christi personet ore pio Agayne how the Angels appeared to him singing the Hymne called Kyr●● Rex splendens c And yet these prodigious fantasies with other mo are written of him in Chronicles and haue bene beleued in Churches Among many other false and lying miracles forged in this corrupt tyme of Monkery the fabulous or rather filthy legēd of Editha were not to be ouerpassed if for shame and honesty it might well be recited But to cast the dyrt of these Pope holy monkes in their owne face which so impudently haue abused the church of Christ and simplicitie of the people with their vngratious vanities let vs see what this miracle is how honestly it is told Certayne yeres after the death of Editha saith Will. of Malmes which yeres Capgraue in his new Legend reckoneth to be thirtene the said Editha also S. Denys holding her by the hand appeared to Dunstan in a vision willing and requiring him that the body of Editha in the church of Wilton should be taken vp shrined to the entent it might be honored here in earth of her seruants according as it is worshipped of her spouse in heauen Dunstan vpon this comming from Salisbury to Wilton where Editha was interred commaunded her body to be taken vp with much honor solemnitie Who there in opening her tombe as both Malmes and Capgraue with shame enough recorde found all the whole body of this Editha cōsumed to earth saue only her thombe her belly the part vnder the belly Wherof the said Editha expounding the meaning declared that her thombe remained found for the much crossing she vsed with the same The other partes were incorrupted for a testimony of her abstinence and integritie c. Ex Malmes Capgrauo What Sathan hath so enuied the true sinceritie of christian faith and doctrine so to contaminate the same with such impudent tales such filthy vanities Idolatrous fantasies as this Such Monkes with theyr detestable houses where Christes people were so abhominably abused and seduced to worship dead carcases of men and women whether they deserued not to bee rased and pluckt downe to the ground let all chaste Readers iudge But of these matters enough and to much ¶ Here followeth the Epitaphe written by Henricus Archdeacon of Huntington vpō the prayse and commendation of king Edgar Autor opum vindex scelerum largitor honorum Septiger Edgarus regna superna petit Hic alter Salomon legum pater orbita pacis Quod caruit bellis claruit inde magis Templa Deo templis monachos monachis dedit agros Nequitiae lapsum iustitiaeque locum Nouit enim regno verum perquirere falso Immensum modico perpetuumque breui Among his other lawes this king ordained that the Sonday should be solemnised from Saterday at ix of the clocke till Monday morning King Edward called the Martyr AFter the death of Edgar no smal trouble arose amōgst the Lordes and Bishops for succession of the crowne the principall cause wherof rose vpon this occasion as by the story of Symon of Durham and Roger Houeden is declared Immediately after the decease of the king Alferus Duke of Mercia and many other nobles which held with Egelrede or Ethelrede the onely right heyre and lawfull sonne of Edgar misliking the placing and intrudyng of Monkes into churches the thrusting out of the seculare Priestes with their wiues and children out of their auncient possessions expelled the Abbots and Monkes and brought in againe the foresayd priestes with theyr wyues Against whom certayne other there were on the contrary part that made resistance as Ethelwine Duke of Eastangles Elfwoldus his brother and the Erle Brithnothus saying in a councell togither assembled that they would neuer suffer the religious Monkes to be expulsed and driuen out of the Realme which held vp all Religion in the land and therupon eftsoones leuied an army whereby to defend by force the Monasteries such as were within the precinct of Eastanglia In this hurly burly amongst the Lordes about the placing of Monkes and putting out of Priests rose also the contention about the crowne who should be their king the bishops and such lordes as fauoured the Monkes seeking to aduance such a king as they knew would inclyne to their side so that the lordes thus deuided some of them would haue Edward and some consented vpon Egelred the lawfull sonne Then Dunstane Archb. of Cant. Oswold Archb. of Yorke with other their fellowbishops Abbots and diuers other Lordes and Dukes assembled in a councel together In the which councell Dunstan cōmyng in with his crosse in his hand bringyng Edward before the Lords so perswaded them that in the ende Edward by Dunstans meanes was elected consecrated and annointed for theyr kyng And thus hast thou good Reader the very truth of this story according to the writing of authors of most antiquitie which liued nerest to that age as Osberne and others which Osberne liuyng in the dayes of William Conquerour wrote this story of Dunstan through the motiō of Lanfran●us and alledgeth or rather translateth the same out of such Saxon stories as were writtē before his tyme. Besides which Osberne we haue also for witnesse hereof Nic Trinet in his English story written in French and also Ioannes Paris in his French story written in the Latine tong where he plainly calleth Edward non legitimum filium that is no lawfull sonne Whereunto adde moreouer the testimony of Vincentius
them that robbe them It belongs also to my care to prouide necessary things to the ministers of the Churches to the flockes of the Monkes to the company of virgins and to prouide for their peace and quiet The examining of all whose maners belongeth vnto vs whether they liue chastly if they behaue themselues honestly towarde them that be without whether they be diligent at Gods seruice if they be earnest to teache the people if they be sober in eating and drinking if they keepe measure in apparell and if they be discreete in iudgement If ye had regarded these thinges with a triall of them O reuerende fathers by your leaues I speake suche horrible and abhominable thinges of the Clearkes shoulde not haue come vnto our eares I omit to speake how their crowne is not broad nor their rounding conuenient the wantonnesse in your life your pryde in your gesture the filthinesse in your wordes doe declare the euill of the inward man Furthermore what negligence is in Gods seruice when scarce they will be present at the holy vigils And when they come to masse they seeme rather to be gathered to play and laugh then to sing I will tell that that good men be sory for and the euil laugh at I will speake with sorrow if so be I may expresse it how they be riotous in banquetings in chambering dronkennes and vnshamefastnes that now clerkes houses may be thought to be a stewes of harlots and a couent of players There be dice there is dancing and singing there is watching to midnight with crying and shouting Thus the goods of kinges the almes of princes yea and that more is the price of that precious bloud is not esteemed Haue our fathers thē spent their treasures for this purpose Hath the kinges cofers decayed by taking awaye many reuenues for this cause Hath the kinges liberalitie geuen landes and possessions to Christes Churches for this intent that Clarkes harlots shoulde be decked with the same that riotous feastes might be dressed that houndes and haukes and such other toyes might be gotten The souldiours crye out of these thinges the people grudge minstrels sing and daunce and yet ye regard it not ye spare it ye dissemble it Where is the sworde of Leuy and the zeale of Simeon whiche killed the Sichemites and the Circumcised which bare the figure of them that defile Christes Churche with filthy deedes because they abused Iacobes daughter as a harlot Where is Moyses spirite whiche spared not hys owne kinsfolke that worshipped the head of the Calfe Where is Phinies the priestes dagger which pacified Gods anger by his holy zeale when he killed him that plaied the harlote with the Madianite Where is Peters spirite by whose power couetousnes is destroied simonical heresie is condemned Be earnest ye Priests be earnest to followe the waies of the Lord the righteousnes of our God It is time to doe against them that haue broken the law of God I haue Constantines sword and yee haue Peters sworde in your hands let vs ioyne right hands let vs couple sword to sword that the lepers may be cast out of the tēples that the holy place of the Lord may be purged and the sonnes of Leuie may minister in the temple who said to his father and mother I know you not and to his brothers I know not you Goe to diligently I pray you least we repent to haue done that that we haue done to haue geuen that that we geue If we shall see that to be spent not in Gods seruice but on the riotousnes of wicked men through vile and corrupt liberty of life for lacke of chastisement let the reliques of holy saintes which they despise and the holy altars before which they play the madde men mooue you Let the great deuotion of our ancetours moue you whose almes the madnesse of the Clearkes doeth abuse My great graundfather as yee know gaue the tenth parte of all hys landes to Churches and Abbeys My greate greate graundfather Alfredus of holy memorie thoughte it not meete to spare hys Treasures his goodes no costes nor rentes that he might enriche the Church My grandfather the elder Edward your fatherhoode is not ignoraunt howe great things he gaue to the Churches It becommeth you to remember with what gifts my father his brothers did enrich Christes altars O father of fathers Dunstane beholde I pray thee the eyes of my father looking on thee from that bright place of heauen Harken his complaining words sounding in thine eares thus pitifully lamenting O father Dunstane thou thou I say geuest me counsell to builde Abbaies and Churches thou wast my helper and fellow worker in all things I chose thee as a shepheard and bishop of my soule and a keper of my maners Whē did I not obey thee what treasures did I preferre in respect of thy counsels What possessions did I not despise if thou badde me If thou thought meete to geue any thing to the poore I was ready If thou thought meete to geue any thing to Churches I deferred not If thou complained that Monkes or Clearkes wanted any thing I supplied Thou saidest that almes lasted for euer and that there was none more fruitfull then that which was geuen to Abbeis or Churches For with that both Gods seruaunts are sustained and that which remaineth is geuen to the poore O worthy almes O worthy price of the soule Oh wholesome remedie for our sinnes which nowe doeth stincke in the sweete furres of priests lemmans wherwith they adorne their eares decke their fingers apparelling their delicate bodies with silke and purple O father is this the fruite of mine almes is this the effect of my desire and of thy promise What wilt thou answer to this complaint of my fathers I know I know when thou didst see a thiefe thou runnest not with him neither hast thou put thy portion with adulterers Thou hast rebuked thou hast exhorted thou hast blamed them but wordes haue bene despised Nowe we must come to stripes of correction thou hast here with thee the worshipfull father Edward bishop of Winchester Thou hast the reuerend Prelate Oswold bishop of Worcester I commit this businesse to you that both by Bishoply correction and the kings authority the filthy liues may be cast out of the Churches and they that liue orderly may be brought in c. In this Oration of K. Edgar aboue prefixed 3. things are chiefly to be noted considered to them that haue iudgements to marke and vnderstand to witte The religious zeale and deuotion of kings both in geuing to the church also in correcting the maners of churchmen 2. Secondly the dissolute behauiour and wantonnesse of the clergie then abusing the great donatiōs and patrimonies of princes bestowed vpon them 3. Thirdly the blinde ignorance and superstition of that time in both states as well Ecclesiastical as temporal in esteeming Christes religion chiefly to consist in geuing to Churches and in
with the Legate and by subtile meanes brought it so to passe that the whole tenthes was gathered and paide to the inestimable damage sayth Pariens both of the Ecclesiasticall and Temporall state The meanes whereof sayeth the authour was this The Legate shewing to the prelates his procuratory letters to collect and gather vp all the foresayde tenthes in the name and authoritie of the Pope declared moreouer full authoritie to him graunted by the vertue of hys commission to excommunicate all such and to interdicte their Churches who soeuer did gainstand or go contrary to the said collection Whereupon by the said vertue legantine he sendeth to euery shire his Proctors to gather the Popes money or els to excommunicate them which denied to pay and for so much as the present nede of the pope required present help without delay he sendeth moreouer to the byshops prelates of the Realme in paine of interdiction foorthwith to procure and send to him either of theyr owne or by loue or vsance or by what meanes so euer so much money in all post spede for the present vse of the pope And after to take vp agayne the said money of the tenthes of euery singular person by the right taxing of their goodes Upon this the Prelates to auoide the daunger hauing no other remedy were driuen to sel their chalices cruets copes iewels and other church plate and some to lay to morgage such things as they had some also to borowe vpon vsance to make the money which was required Moreouer the sayd Stephen the Popes chaplaine as reporteth Paris brought with hym into England for the same purpose such bankers and vsurers who lending out their money vpon great vsurie did vnreasonably pinch the English people which marchant vsurers were then called Caursini Briefly suche straight exaction was then vppon the poore English men that not onely theyr present goodes were valued and taxed but also the corne yet growing in the field against the next haruest was tithed c. Only the Earle of Chester named Ranulphus stood stoutly against the Pope suffring none within his dominion either lay man or clearke to yeld any tenths to the popes proctors Ex Math. Paris pag. 74. And thys was the end of the strife betwene the Monkes of Caunterbury the king for the election of their Archbyshop which was about the yeare of our Lord 1229. In the which yere was finished the new Church of Couētry by Alexander bishop of the sayd Citie and partly by the helpe of the king which Church Richard his predecessor bishop before him of Couentrie had begon The French men about thys time againe prepared themselues towarde Prouince to warre against the foresayde Reimundus Earle of Tholouse and to expulse him out of his possessions And hearing that he was in his Castle of Saracene they made thither all their power thinking there to enclose and compasse him about but the erle being priuie of their conspired purpose set for them by the way appointing certaine bushments in woodes not so secretly as strongly there to waite and receiue the comming of the Frenchmen and to geue them their welcome Thus when the French were entred the woode the Earle wyth his traine of wel armed and able warriors sodenly did flie vppon them vnwares and gaue them a bitter meeting so that in that conflict 500. of the French soldiors were taken and many slaine Of their seruitures to the nūber of 2000. men with their armor were takē Of whom some lost their eyes some their noses some their eares some their legs and so sent home The rest were caried away prisoners into the castel And to be brief saith the history thrise the same sommer were the Frenchmē discomfited put to flight taken and imprisoned by the foresayd Reimundus the godly erle Ex Paris pag. 69. Wherin is to be sene and to be praised the gracious protection of the Lorde our God against the furious papists which is glorious alwaies in hys saints ¶ The same yeare the king being at Portesmouth had assembled together all his Nobility Earles Barons and knightes of England with such an armye of horsemen and footemen as hath not ben lightly sene thinking to recouer againe the Countrey of Normandie of Gaunt and other possessiōs which king Iohn his father before had lost But when the captaines and marshals of the fielde should take shipping there were not halfe ships enough to receiue the host Wherupon the king was vehemently inflamed with anger laying all the fault to Hubert the Lorde chiefe Iustice who vnder the King had all the gouernement of the Realme calling him olde traitour charging him that hee should be the let of his voyage as he was before when hee toke of the French Duene 5000. markes to stay the kings iourney into Normandy In so much the rage of the king was so kindled against him ytdrawing his sword he made at him to runne him through had not the Earle of Chester Ranulph stopt the king Hubert withdrew himselfe away till the kings rage was past This was about the time of Michaelmas at which time arriued Henry Earle of Normandie in the hauen of Portesmouth in the month of Deto● Who shuld haue conducted the king vpon his allegeance othe into Normandie But he with other of the kings armie counsailed the king not to take that voyage toward winter but rather to defer it to the Easter next following wherwith the king was staid and well contented and paci●ied againe with Hubert the Iustice. c. Ex Mat. Paris Fabian recordeth this yeare the liberties and fraunchise of the Citie of London to be confirmed by the king and to enerich of the shriues to be graunted two clerkes and two officers without moe Ex Fabia Then followed the yeare 1230. In which vpon the day of the conuersion of S. Paule as sayeth Paris as a great multitude of people for solemnitie of the day were congregate in the Temple of S. Paule the Bishop then being at hys Masse a sodaine darkenes with such thicknesse of clouds fell in the aire that vnneth one man might see an other in the Church After that followed cracks of thunder lightning so terrible leauing such a sent in the Church that the people loking for doomes day thought no lesse but that the steeple and whole Church woulde haue falne vppon theyr heads In so much that they running out of the church as people amased fell downe together by thousands as men amased not knowing for the time where they were onely the Bishop his Deacon stood still at their masse holding the aulter fast Ex Paris Of the death of Steuen Langton of the troublesome election of the next Archbishop also of the costly chargeable bringing in of Richard to succede in the roume which did cost the whole realme of England the tenths of al their moueables sufficient hath bene declared before Thys Richard being
king made great lamētation and mourning to the great admiratiō of all them that were by saying complayning that he left not his like in all the realine agayne After this the king proceeding in his iourney came to Glocester Where the Archbish with the other Bishops comming to the king declared to him the forme and conditiō of peace which they had cōcluded with Leoline which was this If the king would be reconciled before with the other nobles with whom he was confederate such as the king had banished out of his realm to the end that the cōcord might be the more firme betweene them Thus sayd they was Leoline contented although with much a do great difficulty to receiue y● league of peace saying protesting thus vnto them that he feared more the kings almose then all the puisaunce both of him and of all his clergy within England This done the king there remaining to the Bishops directed his letters to all the exiles and banished Lords to all his nobles that they should repayre to him about y● beginning of Iune at Glocester promising to thē his full fauour reconcilement to them and to their heyres that they should suspect no fraud therin they should haue their safeconduct by the Archbishop and Bishops Whereupon through the mediation of the sayd Archbishop and the Bishops first commeth to the king Hubert Earle of Kent offering himself to the kings good will and fauor Whom the king with chearefull countenance receiued and embraced restoring him not onely to his fauour but also to his household councell with his liuings and possessions frō which he had bene deseised before Thē Hubert lifting vp his eies to heauen gaue prayse and glory to God by whose gracious prouidēce he so merucilously being preserued frō so great distresses tribulatiōs was agayne so happely reconciled to the king and his faythfull frends After him in like sort came in Gilbert Basset a noble mā Richard Suard also Gilbert the brother of Rich. Marshall that was slain which Gilbert recouered again his whole inheritance as wel in England as in Ireland doing his homage to the king and his seruice due for the same To whom also was graunted the office of the high Marshall court belonging before to his brother Richard In the same councell or communication continuing then at Glocester the sayd Edmund Archbishop of caunterbury bringing the forged letters wherein was betraied the life of Richard Earle Marshall sealed with the kings seale and sent to the great mē of Ireland read the same openly in the presence of the king and all the nobles At the hearing wherof the king greatly sorrowing and weeping confessed there in truth that being forced by the Bishop of Winchester and Peter De Riuallis he cōmanded his seale to be set to certayne letters presented vnto him but the tenor thereof he said sware he neuer heard whereunto the Archbishop aunswering agayn desired the king to search well his conscience said that all they which were procurers of knowledge of those letters were gilty of the death of the Earle Marshall no lesse then if they had murdered him with theyr owne handes Then the king calling a councell sent his letters for the bishop of Winchester for Peter Riuall Stephen Segraue and Robert Passeiew to appere and yeld accoūt for his treasures to them committed and for his seale by them abused But the Byshop and Riuall keeping themselues in the sanctuary of the minster Church of Winchester neither durst nor would appeare Stephē Segraue who succeded after Hubert the Iustice and was of the Clergy before after became a layman and now hiding himself in S. Maryes Church in the Abbey of Lecester was turned to a Clerke agayne Robert Passelew couertly hid himself in a certain celler of the new tēple so secretly that none could tell where he was but thought he was gone to Rome At length through the foresaid Edmund Archbishop of Canterbury meanes was made y● a dilatory day was graunted by the king for them to aunswere At which day first appeared Peter De Riuallis then Stephen Segrane after him Robert Passelew ech of them seuerally one after another shewed themselues but not able to aunswere for themselues like traitors were reproued and like villanes were sent away Ex Mat. Parisiens fol. 91. Variance betwene Pope Gregory the 9. and the Romanes WHile peace thus betweene the king and the nobles was reconciled in England dissension and variance the same time and yere began in Rome betwene the pope and the Citizens of Rome The cause was for that the citizens claymed by old custome and law that the Byshop of Rome might not excommunicate any Citizen of the citie nor suspend the said City with any interdiction for any mauer excesse To this the Pope answered agayne Quòd minor Deo est sed quolibet homine maior to vse the very words of mine author Ergo Maior quolibet ciue nae etiam rege vel Imperatore c. that is that he is lesse then God but greater then any man Ergo greater then any Citizen yea also greater then king or Emperor And for so much as he is theyr spirituall father he both ought and lawfully may chastise his children when they offēd as being subiected to him in the sayth of Christ and reduce them into the way agayn whē they stray out of course Moreouer the citizens alledge againe for themselues that the Potestates of the City and Senators do receiue of the Church of Rome yearely tribute which the bishops of Rome were bound to pay vnto them both by new and also auncient law Of the which yerely tribute they haue bene euer in possessiō before this present time of this pope Gregory 9. Hereunto the pope answered and sayd that although the Church of Rome in time of persecution for their defence and cause of peace was wont to respect the head rulers of the Citty with gentle rewardes yet that ought not now to be taken for a custom For that custom only ought to stand which consisteth not vpon examples but vpon right and reason Further and besides the Citizens sayd that they at y● commandemēt of the Senatour would appropriate their countrey with new and larger limits and infranches the same being enlarged with fines and borders To this the pope agayne made answere that certayne Lordshyps and cities and castles be conteined within the compasse of the sayd limites as the City Uitterbium and Moutcastee which they presume to appropriate within their precinct but to ascribe to them and vsurp that which perteineth to other is agaynst right and iustice For these and such other controuersies rising betwene the Pope and the Romaines such dissention kindled that the Pope with his Cardinals leauing the City of Rome remoued to Perusit● as partly before is recited thinking there to remayne and to plant thēselues but the Romans
woulde geue so impudent an attempt to the blinding and deceiuing of all posterityes inserting for grounded truthes and holy decrees such loude lyes and detestable doctrine what may be thought of the rabble of the rest of writers in those dayes what attemptes hope of gayne might cause them to worke By whom and such like is to be feared the fasifying of diuers other good workes now extant in those perillous tymes writtē Thus when the Bishops had once wrested this autoritie out of the Emperours handes they then so fortified armed thēselues and their dominion that although afterwardes Fredericke the first graundfather vnto this good Emperor Fredericke the second as also Ludouicus Boius and Henricus Lucelburgensis as men most studious and carefull for the dignities of the Empire vnfeined louers and maintainers of the vtilitie of the commō weale and most desirous of the preseruatiō and prosperity of the Church did all their indeuors with singular wisedome strength as much as in them lay to recouer agayne from the byshop of Rome this the authoritie of the Imperiall iurisdiction lost most cruelly wickedly abusing the same to the destruction both of the Empyre vndoyng of the cōmon wealth and vtter subuersion of the Churche of God yet coulde they not be able to bryng the same to passe in those darck and shadowed tymes of peruerse doctrine and errours of the people and most miserable seruitude of ciuile Magistrates The same and like priuilege also in the election of theyr bishops Prelates and disposing of Ecclesiasticall offices as the Emperour of Rome had euery Prince and king in theyr seuerall dominions had the like For by the decree of the Councell of Tolerane which in the 25. canon and 63. distinction is mentioned the authoritie of creating and chusing byshops and Prelates in Hispane was in the power of the king of Hispane The like also by the Histories of Clodoueus Carolus Magnus Ludouicus nonus Philippus Augustus Philippus pulcher Carolus 5. Carolus 6. Carolus 7. Kinges of Fraunce is apparaunt and well knowne that all these kinges had the chiefe charge and gouernement of the French Church and not the byshops of Rome And by our English historyes also as you heard it is manifest that the authoritie of chusing ecclesiasticall ministers and byshops was alwayes in the kings of Englād till the raygne of king Henry the 1. who by the labour and procurement of Anselmus Archb. of Cant. was depriued and put from the same Also the Princes of Germany and electors of the Emperor till the tyme of Henry the 5. had all euery Prince seuerally in his owne dition and Prouince the same iurisdiction and prerogatiue to geue dispose ecclesiasticall functions to their Prelates at theyr pleasure and after that it appertayned to the people and prelats together And how in the raigne of Fridericke the Prelates gate vnto themselues alone this Immunitie Ioannes Auentinus in his 7. booke of the Annales of the Boiores doth describe Also it is probable that the kinges of Sicilia had the same facultie in geuing and disposing their Ecclesiasticall promotions and charge of churches Andreas de Istmia ad 1. constit Neap. nu 12. And that because Fridericke defended him against the tyranny of the bishop of Rome therfore as Fazellus sayth he was excommunicated of Honorius But that Platina and Blondus allege other causes wherfore he was excommunicate of Honorius I am not ignorant Howbeit he that will compare theyr writings with others that write more indifferently betweene Honorius and hym shall easily finde that they more sought the fauor of the Romayn bishops then to write a veritie But now agayne to the history of Fridericke Nicholaus Cisnerus affirmeth that whilest Friderike the Emperour was in Sicilia hys wife Constantia dyed at Catrana or Catana In the meane time the Christians which was a great nauy sayled into Egipt and tooke the citie Heliopolis commonly called Damatia and long ago named Pelucinum beyng in good hope to haue dryuen Sultanus the Sowdā out of Egipt had a great marueilous ouerthrow by the conueiyng of the water of the floude Nilus which then ouerflowed into their Campe were sayne to accord an vnprofitable truce with the Sowldane for certayne yeares and to deliuer the citty agayne and so departing out of Egipt were faine to come to Acone and Cyrus to the no small detriment and losse of the Christian army Wherupon king Iohn surnamed Brennus being king of Ierusalem arriued in Italy and prayde ayd of the Emperor agaynst his enemies in whō he had great hope to finde remedy of the euils and calamities before declared and from thence he went to Rome to the Pope declaring vnto him the great discomfite and ouerthrow past as also the present peril and callamitie that they were in desiring also hys ayd therin By whose meanes as Cisnerus sayth the Emperour was reconciled agayne to the Pope and made friendes together to whome also king Iohn gaue Ioell his daughter in maryage which came of the daughter of Conradus King of Ierusalem and Marques of Mounte Ferrat with whome he had for dowry the inheritaunce of the kingdome of Ierusalem as right heyre thereunto by her mother By whome also he atter obteyned the kingdome of Naples and Sicill and promised that with as much expedient speede as he might he would prepare a power for the recouery agayne of Ierusalem and be there himselfe in proper person whiche thinge to doe for that vppon diuers occasions he deferred whereof some thinke one some an other Honorius vnto whome he was lately reconciled purposed to haue made agaynst hym some great and secrete attempt had hee not bene by death before preuented vppon whome were made these Uerses O pater Honori multorum nate dolori Est tibi decori viuere vade mori After whom succeeded Gregorius the 9. as great an enemy to Frederike as was Honorius whiche Gregory came of the race whom the Emperor as before ye heard condemned of Treason which they wrought against him This Gregory was scarcely setled in hys Papacy when that he threatned hym that greatly with excommunication vnlesse he woulde prepare hymselfe into Asia according to hys promise as ye heard before to king Iohn And what the cause was why the Pope so hastened the iourney of Frederike into Asia you shall heare hereafter In effect he could not wel bring that to passe which in his mischieuous minde he had deuised vnlesse the Emperour were farther from him Notwithstanding Fredericke it shoulde seeme smelling a ratte or mistrusting somewhat as well he might alledged diuers causes and lets as lately and truely he dyd to Honorius Fazellus a Sicilian writer sayth that the special cause of the Emperors stay was for the oathe of truce and peace during certayne yeares whiche was made betweene the Saracens and Christians as you heard which tyme was not yet expired The same
shoulde we be accused for such an enemy of our mother the true church as is layd vnto her sonnes charge by such a Byshopp Which true and mother Church with all reuerence we honour and benignity embrace so beautified and adourned with Goddes most holy Sacraments Some singular persons notwihstanding fayning themselues to be our brethren by that mother and yet are not but of a strumpet begot such I say as are subiect and slaues to corruptible things putting thē from amongst vs we vtterly reiect Especially for that iniuries by them done are not only transitorie and mundane wherwith our maiestie is so molested vexed greued Wherefore we cannot so easily mitigate our moode neyther ought we in very dede so to do and therefore are we inforced the more to take the greater reuenge of them You therefore that are men of graue and deliberate counsail hauing the excellēt gift as from God of wisdom and vnderstāding Refuse you that raoring enemie of ours in these his proceedings whose beginnings are so wicked and detestable wisely comparing things past with those to come Otherwise you that are vnder our subiection as well of the Empire as other our dominions shall feele and perceiue both of my chiefe ennemie and persecutour as also of the princes that are his fautors and adherents what reuenge by sword Fredericus Augustus shall take vpon them God so permitting This done hee denounceth a solemne Parliament or councel of al the princes other nobilitie of the Empire at Aegra whether came Conradus Cesar Moguntinus Presul the Saxon Dukes the Lordes of Brandeburgh Misna Thuringus and the Legates of all the nobles of Brabant to aid the Emperor But the princes of Boiemus and Palatinus being dissuaded by the legates vnto whom the Austrians had ioyned thēselues refused to come to the Councel holden at Aegra And being at their wittes ends not knowing well what they might doe forsoke at last the Emperor and toke part with the pope and the other conspirators Then Fredericus Austriacus the Emperors second sonne whom he disherited as ye heard by the aid of the Boiors and Bohemians recouered againe the Dukedomes of Austria and Styria putting to flight and discōfiting the Emperors bandes and garrisons which he had there And although the Cardinals especially that honest man Albertus Boiemus had allured vnto the pope Otho the duke of Boioria as ye heard diuers other noble men of Germanie yet notwythstanding certaine bishops in Boioria as Eberhardus Iuuanensis and Sigrefridus Seginoburgensis being at that time the Emperors Chauncelour Rudicenis Ratheuiensis Conradus Frisingensis and others left not or yet forsoke the Emperor All which the foresayd Albertus not onely did excōmunicate but also by processe sought to bring them vp to Rome before the pope Geuing commaundement to their Collegioners and cloysterers that they should depriue them of their offices chuse such others in their steade as would obey the Pope All which things the Pope vnderstanding by Albertus and of thys their fidelitie to the Emperor corroborated and confirmed the same his doings commaunding them to chuse other byshops in their stedes But the bishops prelates with one consent contemning the popes mandates writs and also the curses and threatnings of Albertus accused reproued greatly blamed his temerity also tiranny which he vsurped against the churches of Germanie and especially against the good Emperor that without his consent he durst be so bolde as to meddle in churches cōmitted to the Emperors gouernment against the old auncient customes and that he had excommunicated the Emperor without iust cause that he had condemned the Emperors faithful subiects as enemies to the Church for standing with their liege and soueraigne Prince which allegiance to violate without horrible iniquitie they might not and so had sought to disquiet them likewise in their charges and administrations had also in that quarel geuen such defiance to the Emperor They accused and condemned the same Albertus also for a most impudent impostor and wicked varlet and for a most pestiferous botch soare of the christian common weale and giue him to the deuil they do as a ruinous enemie as wel of the church as of his owne natural countrey and further thinke him worthy to haue his reward with the rest of the popes pursiuants being the most wicked inuentors deuisers of mischief that were in al Germanie This done they make relation hereof to the Emperor by their letters and further they aduertise all the princes of Germanie especially those which were of the Popes faction or rebellion were the fauorers of Albertus that they should take hede and beware in any case of his subtill deceites pernitious deceiuable allurements nor that they should assist the pope for al his words against the Emperor And doutles by the counsaile of the high prelate or Archb. of Boioria whose name was Iuuanerisis and by his industry and persuasion Fredericus Austriacus was againe reconciled vnto the Emperor his father from whose aide and obedience after that by no promises threatnings bribes nor paines no nor for the execrable curses of the Popes owne holy month he would be induced or remooued But Albertus prosecuteth stil his purposed mischief alluring inciting by al meanes possible and that not amongst the worst but the best frendes to the pope enemies to the Emperor To some he gaue their tithes to fight against the Emperor to other some he gaue the gleebe landes of benefices and to other some hee gaue the spoile of such colledges and monasteries as tooke not part with the pope and to some other also he gaue the colleges monasteries themselues And assuredly I finde by Iohannes Auentinus lib. 7. annalium Boiorum that there were certen of the popes owne birdes that had their ecclesiasticall tithes taken from them and other some had the rents and reuenues of their colleges pluckt away by force to the maintenance of the Popes quarel against the Emperour Hereby was there a windowe opened to do what they listed euery man according to hys rauening and detestable lust and all things lay open vnto their gredy and insatiable desires Who listeth to heare more hereof let him reade Auentinus in his Booke before noted and there shall he see what vastation grew therby to the whole state of Germanie who largely entreateth of the same While these things were thus in working in Germanie Fredericke leauing in Lumbardie Actiolinus wyth a great part of his hoste hee passing with the rest by Apeninum came to Hetruria and set the same in a stay after that he had alaide certaine insurrections there and from thence to Pysas where he was with great amitie and honor receiued and welcomed This citie was alwaies assured and faithfull to the Emperours of Germanie The Pope vnderstanding of the Emperours comming into Hetruria and knowing what power the Emperour had also left in Lumbardie hee with
of an Accolite Also we Thomas Archb. aforesayd by assent counsel and authority whych vppon thee the foresayd William we haue an Exorcist pretensed in the habite of an Exorcist or holy water clarke being an hereticke twise fallen and by our sentence as is aforesayd condemned we doe degrade depose thee from the order of an Exorcist and in token of thys thy degradation and actuall deposition we take from the booke of coniurations and doe depriue thee of all and singular dignity of an Exorcist Also we Thomas Archbish. aforesayd by assent counsaile and authority as is aboue sayd doe degrade depose thee the foresayde William reader pretensed clothed in the habit of a reader an hereticke twise fallen and by our sentence as is aforesayd condēned from the order of a reader And in token of this thy degradation and actuall deposition we take from thee the booke of the deuine sections that is the booke of the Church legende and doe depriue thee of all and singular maner of dignity of such a reader Item we Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury aforesayd by authority counsaile and assent the which we haue as is aforesaid do degrade and put thee foresayd William Sawtre sexten pretensed in the habite of a sexten and wearing a surplice being an hereticke twise fallen by our sentence difinitiue condemned as aforesaid from the order of a Sexten And in token of thys thy degradation and actuall deposition for the causes aforesayd we take from thee the keyes of the Church doore and thy surplice and doe depriue thee of all and singular maner of commodityes of a doore keeper And also by the authority of omnipotent God the father the sonne and holy ghost and by our authority counsaile assent of our whole councel prouinciall aboue written we do degrade thee and depose thee being heere personally present before vs from orders benefices priuilegies and habite in the church and for thy pertinacie incorrigible we doe disgrade thee before the secular Court of the hygh Constable and marshal of England here being personally present and do depose thee from all and singular clerkely honours and dignities whatsoeuer by these wrytings Also in token of thy degradation and deposition here actually wee haue caused thy crowne and ecclesiastical tonsure in our presence to be rased away vtterly to be abolished lyke vnto the forme of a seculare lay man and here doe put vpon the head of thee the foresayd William the cap of a lay secular person beseeching the court aforesaid that they wil receaue fauourably the sayde William vnto them thus recommitted Thus William Sawtre the seruaunt of Christ being vtterly thrust out of the Popes kingdome and metamorphosed from a clerke to a secular lay man was committed as ye haue heard vnto the secular power Which so done the Byshops yet not heerewith contented cease not to call vpō the king to cause him to be brought forth to spedy execution Whereupon the king ready inough and to much to gratify the cleargy and to retaine their fauours directeth out a terrible decree against the said William Sawtre and sent it to the Maior and Sheriffes of London to be put in execution the tenour wherof here vnder emueth ¶ The decree of the king against William Sawtre THe decree of our soueraigne Lord the king his counsel in the Parliament against a certaine new sprong vp hereticke To the Maior Sheriffs of London c. Where as the reuerend father Thomas Archbishop of Canterbury primate of all England and Legate of the Apostolicke sea by the assent consent counsell of other byshops and his brethren Suffraganes and also of all the whole Clergy within his prouince or dioces gathered together in his prouincial counsel the due order of the law being obserued in al poynts in this behalfe hath pronounced and declared by his definitiue sentence W. Sautre somtime chaplain to be fallen again into his most dānable heresy the which before time the sayde W. had abiured thereupon to be a most manifest heretike and therfore hath decreed that he should be disgraded hath for the same cause really disgraded him frō al prerogatiue priuilege of the clergie decreing to leaue him vnto the secular power and hath really so left him according to the lawes canonicall sanctions set forth in this behalfe and also that our holy mother the Church hath no further to do in the premisses We therfore being zelous in religion and reuerent louers of the catholike fayth willing and minding to mainteine defend the holy church the lawes liberties of the same to roote al such errours heresies out of our kingdome of Englād with cōdigne punishmēt to correct punish all heretiques or such as be cōuict Prouided alwaies that both according to the lawe of God mā and the canonical institutions in this behalfe accustomed that such hereticks conuict condēned in forme aforesaid ought to be burned with fire We command you as straigtly as we may or can firmely enioyning you that you do cause the said Williā being in your custody in some publike or opē place within the liberties of your citie aforesaid the cause aforesaid being published vnto the people to be put into the fire and there in the same fire really to be burned to the great horrour of his offence and the manifest example of other Christians Faile not in the execution hereof vpon the perill that will fall thereupon Teste rege apud Westmonast 26. Februar an regni sui ¶ The burning of William Sawtre Thus it may appeare how kinges and princes haue bin blinded and abused by the false Prelates of the Church in so much that they haue bene their slaues and butchers to slay Christes poore innocent members See therefore what danger it is for Princes not to haue knowledge and vnderstanding themselues but to be led by other mens eies specially trusting to such guides who through hipocrisie both deceiue them through crueltie deuour the people As king Henry the fourth who was the deposer of king Richard was the first of all English kings that began the vnmercifull burning of Christes saints for standing against the Pope so was this William Sawtre the true and faithfull martyr of Christ the first of all them in Wickliffes time which I find to be burned in the raigne of the foresaid king which was in the yeare of our Lord. 1400. After the martyrdome of this godly man the rest of the same company began to keepe themselues more closely for feare of the king who was altogether bent to hold with the Popes prelacy Such was the raigne of this Prince that to the godly he was euer terrible in his actions immesurable to few men hartely beloued but Princes neuer lacke flatterers about them Neither was the time of his raigne very quiet but full of trouble of bloud and misery Such was their desire of K.
infect and trouble the Church of God as also concerning the occasions through the which he hath presumed might doe the same because the Prelates do abuse the ecclesiasticall censures as well the Prelates as those that are vnder them d ee not keepe and obserue the order of the churche whych is appoynted them by God whereby it commeth to passe that whylest they themselues do walke the broken vnknowne paths their flocke falleth headlong into the ditch Wherefore let our soueraigne Lord the Pope and this most sacred Councel ordaine and depute Commissioners the which may examine the sayd Iohn Hus vpon all afore wrytten and other thyngs in the presence of them whych knowe the matter Let there be also certaine Doctors and Maisters appoynted to reade ouer and peruse hys bookes which he hath written whereof some are here present that the churche may be spedily purged and cleansed from these errours Upon this hys accusation they ordeined and appoynted 3. commissioners or iudges that is to say the patriark of Constantinople and the byshop of Castle the byshop of Lybusse The which prelates being thus deputed hard the accusation the witnes which was brought in by certaine babling priestes of Prage confirmed by theyr othes afterward recited the sayd accusation vnto the sayd Hus in the prisone at suche time as hys ague was feruent and extremely vpō him Uppon thys Iohn Hus required to haue an aduocate to answer for hym the whych was plainly and vtterly denied him And the reason that the masters Commissioners brought against it was this that the plain canon doth forbid that any man should be a defender of any cause of hys which is suspect of any kind of heresy The vanity and foly of the witnesses was suche that if in case they had not bene both the accusers and iudges themselues there shuld haue needed no distinct confutation I would haue rehersed the testimonies in thys place but that I knew them to to be such as the prudent and wise reader coulde not haue red without great tediousnes Nowheit some of them shal be declared when we come to the processe of hys iudgement Afterwarde when Iohn Husse had recouered lyttle strength or health by the commandement of the three commissioners there was presented vnto hym certaine Articles many in number which they sayd they had gathered out of his booke which he made of the Churche of whych articles some were forged and inuented by maister Palletz other some were gathered onely by halues as shall be more plainly declared hereafter whē we come to speake of the iudgement pronounced and geuen against the sayde Hus. Thus Iohn Hus remained in the prison of the couent of the Franciscanes vntill the Wednesday before Palme Sonday and certaine appoynted to keepe hym and in the meane season to employ and spende his time wythall he wrote certaine bookes That is to say of the ten commandements of the loue and knowledge of God of Matrimony of Penaunce of the three enemies of mankinde of the prayer of our Lord and of the Supper of our Lord. The same day Pope Iohn the 23 chaūged his apparell conucyed himselfe secretly out of Constance fearing the iudgemēt by the which afterward he was depriued of his Papall dignitie by meanes of most execrable abhominable forfaites and doynges This was the cause that Iohn Hus was trāsported and caried vnto an other prison for the Popes seruauntes which had the charge and keeping of Iohn Hus vnderstanding that their Maister was fled gone deliuered vp the keyes of the prison vnto the Emperour Sigismund and to the Cardinals and followed their Maister the Pope Then by the whole cōsent of the Councell the sayd Iohn Hus was put into the handes of the Byshop of Constance who sent him to a Castle on the other side of the Riuer of Rhine not very farre from Cōstance whereas he was shut vp in a Tower with fetters on his legges that he could scarse walke in the day tyme and at night hee was fastened vp to a racke agaynst the wall hard by his bed In the meane season certaine noble men and Gentlemen of Pole Boheme did al their indeuour to purchase his deliueraunce hauing respect to the good renowne of all the Realme the which was wonderfully defamed and slaundered by certaine naughty persons The matter was growne vnto this pointe that all they which were in the towne of Constance that seemed to beare any fauour vnto I. Hus were made as mockyng stocks and derided of all men yea euen of the slaues and base people Wherfore they tooke counsell and cōcluded together to present their request in writing vnto the whole Coūcell or at the least vnto the foure nations of Almaine Italie Fraunce and England this request was presented the 14. day of May. an 1415. The tenour here ensueth ¶ The first schedule or Bill whiche the nobles of Boheme deliuered vp to the Councell for the deliueraunce of Iohn Hus the 14. day of May. Anno. 1415. MOst reuerēd Fathers and Lordes The Nobles and Lordes of Boheme and Pole here present by this their present writynges doe shew and declare vnto your Fatherly reuerences how that the most noble Kyng and Lord the Lord Sigismund kyng of Romaines alwayes Augustus kyng of Hungary Croatia Dasmatia c. hearyng of the great dissention that was in the kyngdome of Boheme as heyre Kyng and Lord successour willyng mynding to foresee and prouide for his owne honour he sent these Noble men Maister Wenceslate de Duba and Iohn de Clum here present that they would bryng and assure Maister Iohn Hus vnder the kyng his name and safe conduct So that he would come to the sacred generall Councell of Constance vnder the safe conduct of the sayd kyng and the protection of the sacred Empire openly geuen and graunted vnto the sayd Maister Iohn Hus that hee might purge himselfe and the kyngdome of Boheme from the slaunder that was raysed vpon them and there to make an open declaration of his Fayth to euery man that would lay any thyng to his charge The which the sayd Nobles with the forenamed Maister Iohn Hus haue performed and done accordyng to the kynges commaundement When as the sayd Maister Iohn Hus was freely of his owne accorde come vnto Constance vnder the sayd safe conduct greuously imprisoned before he was heard and at this present is tormented both with fetters and also with hunger and thirst Albeit that in tymes past at the Councell holden at Paysan 1410. yeare of our Lord the heretickes whiche were condemned were suffered to remayne there at libertie and to depart home freely Notwithstandyng this Maister Iohn Husse neither beyng conuicted nor condemned no not so much as once heard is taken and imprisoned when as neither any kyng or any Prince Elector either any Embassadour of any Uniuersitie was yet come or present And albeit the Lord the Kyng together
The tenour of those articles wherof we haue made mention in this our owne writing are in wordes as follow The articles of Iohn Hus to be inquired vpon 1 THere is one onely vniuersall Church whiche is the vniuersitie of the predestinate as shall after be declared 3. The vniuersall Church is onely one as there is one vniuersitie of those that are predestinate 3. Paule was neuer a member of the Deuill although he did certayne actes like vnto the actes of the Church malignant 4. The reprobate are not partes of the Churche for that no part of the same finally falleth from her because that the charitie of predestination which bindeth the same Church together neuer fayleth 5. The two natures that is the Diuinitie and the humanitie bee one Christ. 6. The reprobate although he be sometime in grace according to present iustice yet is he neuer a part of the holy Churche and the predestination is euer a member of the Churche although sometime he fall from grace aduentitia but not from grace of predestinatiō euer taking the church for the conuocation of the predestinate whether they be in grace or not according to present iustice And after this sort the church is an article of our beliefe 7. Peter is not nor neuer was the head of the holy catholicke Church 8. Priestes liuing viciously doe defile the authoritie of priesthood and so as vnfaythfull Children do vnfaythfully beleue of the seuen sacraments of the keyes of the Church of offices of Censures of ceremonies of the worshippyng of reliques indulgences orders and other holy things of the Church 9. The papill dignitie came and grew from the Emperor and hys gouernement and institution sprang from the emperours gouernment 10. No man can reasonably affirme eyther of himselfe or other that he is the head of any particular Churche or that the bishop of Rome is the head of the Church of Rome 11. A man ought not to beleue that he which is byshop of Rome is the head of euery particuler Churche vnles god haue predestinate hym 12. None is the vicare of Christ or els of Peter vnlesse he follow him in maners and conditions seing that there is no other following more pertinent nor otherwise apte to receiue of God this power procuratory For vnto the office of a vicegerent of Christ is required the conformitie of maners and the authoritie of the institutor 13. The pope is not the manifest and true successor of Peter the Prince of the Apostles if he liue in maners contrary to Peter and if he hunt after auarice then is he the vicar of Iudas Iscarioth And likewise the Cardinalles be not the true and manifest successors of the Colledge of the other Apostles of Christ vnles they lyue according to the maner of the Apostles keeping the commaundementes counsels of our Lord Iesus Christ. 14. The Doctors alledging that if a man which will not be amended by the Ecclesiasticall censures is to be deliuered to the secular powers do follow in this poynt the byshops Scribes and Phariseis that deliuered Christ to the secular power saying it is not lawfull for vs to kill anye man because he would not obey them in all thinges and that such be greater homicides then Pilate 15. The ecclesiasticall obedience is such an obedience as the Priestes of the church haue found out besides the expresse authoritie of the scripture The immediate deuision of humaine works is that they be either vertuous or vicious if a man be vicious and doth any thyng then doth he it vitiously if he be vertuous and doth any thinge thē doth he it vertuously For like as vice which is called a great offere or mortall sin doth stayne all the doyngs of a vicious man so vertue doth quicken all the doinges of a vertuous man 16. A priest of God liuing after hys lawe and hauing the knowledge of the scripture and a desire to edify the people ought to preach notwithstanding any excommunication pretended of the pope And further if the pope or anye other magistrate doeth forbid a priest so disposed to preache he ought not to be obedient vnto hi● For euery one that taketh vpō him the order of priesthood receiueth in charge the office of a preacher and of that burden ought he well to discharge himselfe any excommunication against him pretended in any wise notwithstanding 17. By the Censures ecclesiasticall as of excommunication suspending and interdicte the clergy to their owne aduauncement cause the lay people to ayd them they multiply their auarice they defend their malice and prepare the way to Antichrist And it is an euident signe that such censures proceede from Antichrist which in their process they call Fulminationes that is their thunderboltes where with the clergy principally proceedeth agaynst those that declare the wickednes of Antichrist who so greatly for hys owne commoditie hath abused them 18. If the pope be euill especially if he be a reprob●●● thē is he with Iudas a very deuill a theefe and the sonne of perdition and is not the head of the holy Church militant nor any member of the same 19. The grace of predestination is the band wherwith the body of the church and euery member of the same is indissolubly ioyned to their head Christ. 20. The pope or Prelate that is euill and a reprobate is a Pastor in name and not in deede yea he is a theefe and a robber in very deede 21. The P. ought not to be called the most holy one for his office sake for then ought a king to be called by hys office the most holy one and hangmen with other such officers also were to be called holye yea the deuill hymselfe ought to be called holy for asmuch as he is Gods officer 22. If the pope liue contrary vnto Christ although he clime vp by the right and lawfull election according to the common custome of men yet notwithstanding shoulde be otherwise clime then by Christ yea though wee admitte that he shoulde enter by the election principally made by God For Iudas Iscarioth was lawfully elect of GOD Christ Iesus to hys byshopricke and yet came not he the same way he ought to do vnto the shepefold 23 The condemnation of 45. articles of Iohn Wickleffe by the doctors made is vnreasonable wicked and naught the cause by them alledged is sayned that is that none of them are Catholicke but euery on of them hereticall erroneous or slaunderous 14. Not for that the electours or the most part of thē haue consented together with liuely voyce according to the custome of men vpon the person of any therfore that person is lawfully elect or therfore is the true and manifest successors vicar of Peter the Apostle or of any other the Apostles in y● ecclesiastical office Wherfore whether the electors haue either wel or euil made their election it behoueth vs to beleue the same by the workes of him that is elected
cold neither vsing any kind of daynty fare but onely to resist hunger watching and praiing the most part of the night Wherfore this Prince is not newly come vnto the Church as some do suppose but being a Christian borne of progenitours a thousand yeares and more being Christians doth now serue God in a monastery But as touching that also which is spokē concerning a wife I do not regarde it when as not onely he whiche hath had a wife but he also which hath a wife may be elect chosen pope For why do the doctors dispute whether a maried man chosen pope ought to performe his duety toward his wife but onely because a maryed man might bee receiued and chosen For as you know well enough there were many Popes that had wiues and Peter also was not without a wife But what doe we stande about this for peraduenture it had bene better that more priestes had bene maried for many shoulde be saued through maryage which are now dāned through theyr single life But hereof we will sayth he speak in another place But this semeth vnto me rather to be laughed at then worthy any answer which is obiected touching his children for what can children specially being of great age be impediment or let vnto the father being a Bishop Doth not the Scripture say wo be vnto him that is a lone for if he fall he hath none to helpe him vp agayne This can not be imputed vnto the prince for he hath 2. sonnes both comely and wise Whereof the one is prince of Piemont the other Earle of the Gebennians these men will rule the country of Sauoy in the absence of theyr father will helpe him if he haue need for they haue already learned to rule ouer that people I pray you what hurt is it for a Byshop of Rome to haue valiant childrē which may helpe theyr father agaynst tyrants O most reuerent fathers the more I do beholde the storme of this most peruerse and froward time the more I do cōsider the vexations and troubles which the church is now tormented withall I do so much the more thinke it profitable yea necessary that this man should be chosen prince and head I will thinke that God hath shewed his mercye vpon vs if I may see him haue the gouernance ouer thys boate I pray you cōsider into what straights we are now driuen with what perils we are now vexed tossed What prince is it that is obedient vnto this coūcel For some wil not confesse that the Coūcel is here neither receiue our decrees other some confesse it in theyr wordes but by theyr deedes they declare it to be at Florence For albeit that by theyr wordes letters they do not denye that the churche is here yet do they procure promotiōs at the hands of Gabriell which is deposed This is the state of the Churche with these stormes and tempestes the shippe is shaken and brused Wicked children haue risen vppe agaynst theyr mother which being vnmindefull of theyr mothers labours kindnesse towards them despise her contēn her beat her What is to be done here in Shall we chuse a bare manne which shall rather be derided of our princes thē had in reuerēce The dayes are not now that mē haue respect onely vnto vertue for as the Satyricall Poet writeth vertue is praysed but is coldly folowed A poore man speaketh they aske what he is Truely vertue is good but for our purpose it must be marked and looked vpon whether it be in a riche man or a poore man you must chuse a gouernour which may rule the ship not onely by Councell but by power also The winde is great Wherfore except the Councell be good and the power strong the ship shall be broken all put in daunger The memorial is yet fresh before our eyes that the princes doe neglect the authority which is of no force or power Is there not great valiantnesse shewed in this poynt in that you fearing no perill or daunger eyther of life or goods haue so long contended for the truth of Christ But the moste mighty high God looketh downe from on high and will resist this theyr pride I haue often consented vnto theyr opinion which sayde it was expedient that the tēporall dominions should be deuided from the Ecclesiasticall state for I did think that the priests should therby be made more apt to the diuine ministery the secular princes more obedient to the clergy but for so much as at this presēt the churches of the world are possessed partlye by Eugenius partly by other tyraunts we must prouide that we chuse such a one which may recouer agayn the patrimony of the Church and in whom the office of Christes vicar may not be contemned through the shielde of whose power theyr contumacy may be suppressed which contēne both verity reason Whereunto no man seemeth vnto me more apt or meet thē Amadeus duke of Sauoy which holdeth the one part of his possessions in Italy and the other in Fraunce Unto whom all christen princes are allied eyther by consanguinity or ioyned by amity and frēdship whose vertue how famous it is I haue already declared Why doe we then stay or doubte to chuse him then whome Gabriell feareth no mā more Let him therfore perish with the sword where withall he hath stricken There is no man which can more pac●●y the church then he Do you require deuotion in a bishop there is no man more deuout thē he Do you require prudēce Now ye vnderstād by his former life what maner of man he is If ye seek for iustice his people are a witnes thereof so that whether you seeke for vertue or power all are here present before you Wherupon do ye stay Go to I pray you chuse this man He will augment the fayth he will reforme maners and preserue the authority of the Church Haue ye not heard these troubles of the church to haue bene afore spoken of and that the time now present should be an end of al troubles Haue ye not heard that about this time there should a Pope be chosen which should comfort Syō and set all things in peace And who I pray you should he be that could fulfill these thinges except we chuse this man Beleue me these sayinges must be fulfilled I trust that God will moue your minds thereunto Notwithstāding do whatsoeuer ye shall think most good and holy When he had spoken these wordes the greatest nūber of the electors semed to consent vnto him and his wordes tooke such effect that in the next Scrutiny the matter was finished and ended and when the Scrutiny was opened it was found that Amedius the most deuout duke of Sauoy according to the decree of the Councell was chosen Pope Wherfore sodenly there was great ioy gladnes amongst them and all men highly commended theyr doings Then the Cardinall
in tymes past by ignoraunce had all vnder hys possession yet neyther must he thinke that violence will alwayes continue neyther must he hope for that now which he had then for so much as in those former dayes bookes then were scarse also of such excessiue price that few coulde attayne to the buying fewer to the reading studying therof which bookes now by the meanes of this arte are made easie vnto al men Ye heard before pag. 665 how Nicholas Belward bought a new testament in those dayes for foure markes and 40. pence where as now the same price will serue well 40. persons with so many bookes Moreouer in the pag. 411. col 1. it was noted and declared by the testimony of Armachanus how for defect of bookes and good authors both vniuersities were decaied and good wits kept in ignoraunce while begging Fryers scaping all the wealth from other priestes heaped vp all bookes that coulde be gotten into theyr owne Libraryes where eyther they dyd not diligently applye them or els did not rightly use them or at least kept them from such as more fruitfully would haue perused them In this then so great raritie and also dearth of good books when neither they which could haue books would well vse them nor they y● woulde could haue them to vse what maruell if the greedines of a few prelates did abuse the blindnes of those daies to the aduauncement of themselues Wherefore almighty God of hys mercifull prouidence seeing both what lacked in the church and how also to remedy the same for that aduauncement of his glory gaue the vnderstanding of this excellent arte or science of printing whereby three singular cōmodities at one time came to the world First the price of all bookes diminished Secondly toe speedy helpe of reading more furthered And thirdly the plenty of all good authours enlarged according as Aprutinus doth truely report Imprimit ille die quantum non scribitur anno 1. The presse in one day will do in printing That none in one yeare can do in writing By reason whereof as printing of bookes ministred matter of readyng so readyng brought learning learning shewedlight by y● brightnes wherof blind ignorance was suppressed errour detected finally Gods glory with trueth of hys worde aduaunced This facultie of Printing was after the inuention of Gunnes the space of 130. yeares which inuention was also found in Germany an 1380. And thus much for the worthy commendation of printing ¶ The lamentable losing of Constantinople ANno 1453. Constantinus Paloelogus beyng Emperour of Constatinople the 29. day of the month of May the great Cittye of Constantinople was taken by the Turke Mahometes after the siege of 54. dayes which siege began in the beginning of Aprill Within the city beside the Citizens were but onely 6000. rescuers of the Greekes And 3000. of the Uenetians Gennues Against these Mahometes brought an army of 400. thousand collected out of the countryes and places adioyning nere about as out of Grecia Illirico Wallachia Dardanis Triballis Bulganis out of Bithynia Galatia Lydia Cecilia and suche other which places had the name yet of Christians Thus one neighbour for lucre sake helped to destroy all other The Cittie was compassed of the Turkes both by the sea land Mahometes the Turke deuided his armye in 3. sondry partes which in 3. partes of the citty so bette the walles and brake them downe that they attempted by the breaches therof to enter the cittye But the valiauntnes of the Christians there in wanne much cōmendation whose Duke was called Iohn Iustinianus of Genua But for so much as the assaultes were great and the number of the Christian souldiours dayly decreased fighting both at the walles and at the Hauen agaynst such a multitude of the Turkes they were not able long to hold out Beside the armyes which lay battering at the walles the Turke had vpon the sea his nauy of 200. and 50. sayle lying vpon the hauen of the City reaching from the one side of the hauens mouth vnto the other as if a bridge should be made frō the one banke to the other Which hauen by the cittizens was barred with yron chaines whereby the Turks were kept out a certayne space Agaynst whiche nauy 7. ships there were of Genua within the hauen and 3. of Creta and certayne of Chio which stoode agaynst them Also the souldiours issuing out of the Cittie as occasion would serue did manfully gaynstand them and with wild fire set their ships on fire that a certayn space they could serue to no vse At length the cheynes being brast a way made the Turkes nauy entred the hauen and assaulted the Cittie whereby the Turke began to conceiue great hope and was in forwardnes to obtain the Citie The assault and skirmish thē waxing more hoate Mahometes the tyraunt stode by vppon an hill with hys warriours about him crying houling out vnto them to skale the walles and enter the towne otherwise if any reculed he threatned to kill them and so he did Wherefore a great number of his souldiours in theyr repulse and retire were slaine by the turkes men being sēt by his commandement to slay them and so they were iustly serued and well payd theyr hyer Although this was some comfort to the Christians to see and behold out of the Cittie the Turkes retinue so consumed yet that hope lasted not long Shortly after by rage of warre it happened Iustinian the Duke aboue named to be hurt who notwithstanding that he was earnestly desired by Paloelogus the Emperour not to leaue his Tower which he had to keepe seeing hys wound was not deadly daungerous yet could he not be intreated to tary but lefte his standing and his fort disfurnished setting none in his place to award the same And so this donghty Duke hurte more with hys false hart then with force of weapon gaue ouer and fled to Chius where shortly after for sorrow rather then for sorenes of wound he died Many of his souldiours seeing their captayne flee followed after leauing their fort vtterly destitute without defence The Turkes vnderstanding y● vantage soone brast into the cittie The Emperour Paloelogus seeing no other way but to flee making toward the gate eyther was slayne or els troden down with the multitude In the which gate 800. dead mēs bodies were found and taken vp The Cittie of Constantinople thus being gotte the Turkes sacking and raunging about the streetes houses and corners did put to the sword most vnmercifully whō soeuer they found both aged and young matrones virgins children and infants sparing none the noble matrones and virgins were horriblye rauished the goods of the cittie the treasurers in houses the ornaments in churches were all sackt and spoyled the pictures of Christ approbriously handled in hatred of Christ. The spoyle and hauocke of the citie lasted three dayes together while the barbarous souldiours murdered and rifeled what them
Queene Elizabeth The trayterous murdering of the Lord Iames Regent of Scotland Martyr The chiefe cause of al these latter persecution in the Church is onely the priuate quarrell of the Bishop of Rome The plantation of the Popes supremacie proued not to be of God Iohn 8. Luke 18. The 3. question Apocal. 13. The two beastes in the booke of Reuelatiō described The second beast with the hornes like a Lambe The misterie of the first beast rising out of the Sea applied The Image of the beast resembled to the Monarchie of Rome Apocall 13. Of these 42. monethes and the exposition thereof read page 101. The wounded head of the beast in the reuelation what it meaneth The second beast rising out of the land pretending the hornes of a Lambe what it meaneth Apocall 13. The Misterie of the 13. chapter of the Reuelations expounded Ex platina in vita Grego●ij 7. The Image of the old Monarchie reuiued by the Bishop of Rome Power to doe the workes of the beast before his sight Apocal. 13. The 4. question 2. Thess. 2. Religion of Christ spiritual and not corporall The Pope turneth the spirituall religion of Christ to a corporall religion The whole summe of the Popes Catholicke religion set forth in partes A man may be Catholique by the Popes religion without any working of the holy ghost The nature of t●ue Christian Religion described Saluation of man standeth onely in fayth of Christ. Fayth in Christ no light matter to fleshe and bloud Many thinges incident to saluation besides fayth but not as causes thereof Workes of sanctification how they come and follow fayth Esay 58. Math. 25. Euseb. lib. 8. cap. 1. Plat. de rep 8. Hippocrates Constantinus erus Ad Martyres Ad deum de inundantibus bellorum procellis Math. 16. Three thinges noted in Christes wordes The order of the disposition of this history 1 The suffering time of the church 2 The florishing time of the Church 3 The declining time of the church 4 The time of Antichrist in the Church 5 The reformation of the Church Church of Rome Foure thinges to be considered in the Church of Rome 1. Title 2. Iurisdiction 3. Lyfe 4. Doctrine The title of the Pope The iurisdiction of the Pope The iurisdiction of the Pope The properties of life in the Romish Clergy The doctrine of the Pope Pope siluester the second Pope Gregory 7. called Hildebrand Pope innocentius the third Pope Bonifatius the eight Equinocé That is in name onely and not in very deede Vutuocè That is both in ●ame and also in definition and effect agreeing with the name The Church of Rome as now it is is not Apostolicall but onely aequiuocè The argument of Pighius Hosius and Eckius for the aucthoritie of the Church of Rome Aunswere Fallacia aquiuoci The minor examined The maior examined A distinction The church of Rome distincted into a double consideration of tymes The 〈◊〉 of Rome how it was commend●d of the 〈◊〉 Doctours The principall obiection of the Papistes agaynst the Protestants Aunswere to the obiection The church of Rome reuolted from the Church of Rome An other obiection of the papists An answere to the obiection No man bound to follow the opinions of hys Godfathers in all poyntes vnlesse they be consonant in al things The church of Rome distincted frō the Church of Rome Two times of the Church of Rome considered and examined The first poynt The enormities of life in the latter Churche of Rome described Policies and practises of Rome to get mony XV. Practises of the newe Churche of Rome to get mony Summa totalis The iurisdiction and power of this new church of Rome examined This ●ewe Church of Rome in three poyntes challenged Nicen. Con. Cap. 6. Victor stopped from his excommunication by Ireneus Boniface the first falsefieth the Councell of Nice The 6. Councell of Carthage Appellations to Rome forbidden in England Appellations to Rome forbiddē in Fraunce Ex Annonio de gestis Frācorum Lib 5. Cap. 33. The Popes iurisdiction resisted in Fraunce Pragmatica sanctio The Popes iurisdiction concerning elections examined Platina Sabel Enead 8. lib. 6. Constātine the 4. Emperour of Constantinople The Popes bibliothe carie suspected The constitution of Constantine the 4. Emperour of Constātinople examined Rubrica de ordinatione Episcopi ex Caelestino Papa dist 63. Cap. Cleri Dist. 63. Cap. Sacrorum Libertie graunted to the Clergy and to the people to chuse their Bishop Carolus Magnus Ludouicus P●us The decree Ego Ludocus dist 63. suspected Gratianus Vol●teranus what ground they haue of their recordes Dist. 63. ca. Ego Ludouicus Election of the Bishop of Rome standeth vpon the cōsent of the Clergy and the people of Rome The decree Ego Ludouicus proued fals Dist. 23. ca. In Nomine Domini The iudiciarie power of the Pope examined Georg. Turonens in Francorum hist. lib. 10. ca. 18. The Popes jurisdiction vsurped in geuing and disposing ecclesiastical promotions 16. q. 7. cap. emnes Basilicae The Councell of Nice cap ● The generall Councell of Antioch cap. 9. 9. q. 3. cap. per singulas Pragmatica sanctio sancti Ludouici Impropriations and first finites of benefices Institutiones canonicae sub Ludouico Pio. The wordes of Prosper Aug. ad Bonifac Vowsons and pluralities of benefices Three points wherein the Popes Church erreth in his iurisdiction 1 Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction falsly restrained impropriate to the Church of Rome which ought to be generally equall to all Churches Christian. 2 Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction abused and extended in the church of Rome further then the word limiteth Christening of Bels. 3 The iurisdiction of the Pope abused and vsurped in temporal matters where he hath nothing to doe Popes submitted in the olde tyme to Emperours Ex cap. 1. de iuramentis calumniat Dist. 97. cap. 1. Plat. in vita Euge. 2. Euidences prouing ecclesiasticall persons to haue bene subiect to their Magistrates in causes both Ecclesiasticall temporall Euidences out of the Scripture Dauid 1. Par. cap. 30.31 Ezechias 4. Reg. 18. The order of Abias was the eight order among the Priests 1. Par. 24. Salomon Iudas Machabeus 1. Mac. 10. 1. Mac. 14. Iosaphat 2. Par. 19. Iohn 19. Rom. 13. Theophilactus Aug. ad Bonifacium Aug. contra Cresconiū li. 3. cap. 5. Thomas de regim princip li. ● cap. 32. 1. Pet. 2. Gregor ad Maurit Aug. lib. 3. epist. 61. The Pope calleth king Lucius Christes Vicar 23. q. cap. 5. principes cap. Administratores Dist. 97. ca. ecclesiae cap. Victor Dist. 79. ca. Si duo 24. q. 3. cap. De illicita Ex Nouel 5. Iustinian Diuine seruice vsed in the vulgare tongue Clodoueus Concilium Aureliense Carolus Magnus Canonicall Scripture onely to be read in Churches Conc. Cartha 3. cap. 47. Bishops and Priests charged to p●each with diligence Superstition in Funerals forbidden Ex. Ansegiso Abbate lib. 1. cap. 76. Ludouicus Pius Ex Ans. lib. 1. cap. 20. Lib. 2. C de
pontif Lib. 4. Ex Roger. Ho 〈◊〉 Eabia c. Anno. 1116. Assemble of the nobles at Salisbury Thurstine refuseth to professe subiection to the Arch. of Cant. Thurstine promiseth to renounce hys archbishopricke Anno. 1118. Pope Calixtus breaketh promise with the king Thurstine sacred archbishop of Yorke by the Pope agaynst the kinges minde Concision Rhemense Actes of the councell of Rhemes The Actes sent to the Emperour The Emperour agreeth not to the popes inuesting The councell deuided Ex Rog. Houed Henry the Emperour excommunicated Agreed that England shoulde haue no other Legate from Rome but onely the Archb. of Cant. England spoyld by the popes legates All the custome of the Realme graunted of the pope Anno. 1120. The popes letter to the King The king compelled to receaue Thurstinus for feare of the popes curse Thurstinus restored Anno. 1122. Wil. Archb. of Cant. The gray Friers first came into England Anno. 1125. Priestes payd for their wiues Ex Roger. Houed El Guliel Gisburnēsi Ex Henrie Hunting lib. 7. The Abbey of Gilburne bailded S. la ues hand Reading Abbey foūded Matilde daughter of K. Henry heyre to the crowne Geffry Plātagenet Henry 2. borne of Matilde the Empresse Anno. 1130. The priorie of Norton founded Three terrible visiōs of the king Three vowes made of King Henry Anno. 1131. Danegelt released The Church relieued Iustice rightly administred Bishoprike of Carlile newly erected by king Henry The Citie and Paules Church of London burned Honorius the 2. Mathaeus Partsiensis A romishe statute concerning priestes wiues and Concubines Mariage forbid to the seuenth degree The Popes Legate geuing preceptes of chastitie was found with an harlot Lotharius Emperour Arnulphus Martyred at Rome The history of Arnulphus Arnulphus Martyr Ex Tretimio A booke called Tripartitum written 400. yeares agoe Number of holy dayes Curious singing in Cathedrall Churches The world ouercharged with begging Religions Promotion of euill prelates Supersluitie of apparell in Bishops families Byshops seales abused to get mony Non residentes in benefices Rash bestowing of benefices Wastefull spending of the Church goods Old bookes of Councels lost by the negligence of the clerkes The vnchaste lyfe of priestes condemned by the nature of the storkes Amendment of lyfe ought first to begin with the priestes The realme of Fraunce interdited King of Portingale deposed The Knights of the Rhodes and Templars Pope 〈◊〉 centius the second Hurly 〈◊〉 betweene Popes The pope curse proclaymed agaynst 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 any priest The death of K. Henry Anno. 1135. Periury iustly punished Ex Chris. Anglico in certi aut●ris The Bishop of Sarum and of Lincolne take● prisoners of the king and led with ropes about their neckes Roger. ●eued in 〈◊〉 Steph. Ex Fabian In vita Step. Anno. 1136. K. Stephen Building of Castles in England The cruelty of the Scots agaynst the Englishe man Anno. 1140. Maude the Empresse came into England agaynst Steuen King Steuē●ken prisoner What it is for princes to be hard and straite to their subjectes K. Stephen and Robert Erle of Glocester deliuered by exchaunge Ex incerti autoris chronise The decease of Geffry Plantagenet Henry Duke of Normandy Henry entereth into England Theobalde Archbishop of Cant. Peace betwene king Steuen and Duke Henry concluded The death of K. Steuen S. William of Yorke Gracianns the compiler of the popes decrees Petrus Lombardus maister of the sentence Petrus Comestet Hugo de sancto Victore Bernardus Clareualensis Hildegare Ioannes detemporibus The fewes crucified a christen body at Norwich The order of the Gilbertines The Lordes prayer and the Creede in Englishe Matthaeus Pariensis lib. Chron. 4. Steuen king of England Cursing with booke bell and candle Anno. 1138. Pope Lucius the ij warring agaynst the Senators Spirituall excommunication abused in temporall causes Hadrianus a Pope an Englishman Anno. 1154. King Henry the second Thomas Becket chauncellor of England Anno. 〈◊〉 Gerhardus Dulcinus Preaches agaynst Antichrist of Rome Ex 〈◊〉 Gisbaron si Anno. 11●● Fredericus Barbarosa Emperor The pope displeased that the Emperour did not held his right stirrup The Emperour holdeth the Popes stirrup The Popes old practice in setting Princes together by the eares War more gaynefull to the Pope then peace Warre stirred vp by the Pope The pope driuen to entreate for peace The godly proceedings of Frederick the Emperour agaynst the pope A letter of Pope Hadrian to the Emperour Fredericke The Emperours name before the Popes A seditious and proud letter of the pope to the Bishops of Germany Well bragged and like a Pope Scripture well wrasted Ex Radenuico in appendice Frisingensis See the ambitious presumption of a proude priest Note here a couragious hart in a valiaunt Emperour An example for all princes to follow Note The order of Erenu●● Anno. 1159. The saying and iudgement of P. Adrianus of the papall sea The popes rather successors to Romulus then to Peter Pope Alexander the third Alexander curseth the Emperour Anno. 1164. Volateran ●ken with a ●tradiction Concilium 〈◊〉 The clergie ●ounde to ●he vowe of ●hastitie Papi●tes are not so much in pro 〈◊〉 chastitie as in desining chastitie Tho. Becket Archb. at Cant. Becket no martyr Herberturde busebam Ioan. Charnot A lanus Abbot of Tenchbury Gulselmus Cantuariensis Tho. Becked described What commeth of blinde zeale destitute of right knowledge The life of Tho. Becket Polydorus mistaketh the mother of Becket Ex Roberto Cri●eladensi Ex Florilego 〈…〉 The 〈◊〉 of van●● recited betweene 〈◊〉 king 〈◊〉 Archb. The kings custome Out of an Englishe Chronic●● as it appearreth 〈◊〉 en cured French●● Erle ●●lord 〈◊〉 The lawes of Claredoun Beckets additiō Saluo ordine suo The Bishop of Chichester The stubberne wilfulnes of T. Becket T. Becket relenteth to the king Becket yeldeth to the king Saluo ordine left out in the composition Becket repenteth of hys good deede A letter of pope Alexander to T. Becket Becket enterprising agaynst the king● 〈◊〉 to flye out of the realme Becket taunted of the king Ex Rogero Houed pr● parte historia continuas a post Bedam The kinge to be the Pope Legate The ce●sty dissimulation of the Pope The popes secret letters to Becket More then an C. murthers done by the clergye Guliel Neuburg lib. 2. ca. 16. Becket cited to Northampton The Archbish. condemned in the Councell of Northamtō in the lo●●e of all hys moueables Becket required to geue an accompt The verdite of Winchester The counsell of the Bishop of London Canterbury Winchester Chichester Moderate counsell Lincolne Exceter Worcester Becket the Archbishop replyeth agaynst the Byshops A great ●●ielle growen in the church because that Byshop may no●●● aboue 〈◊〉 and prince Becket destitute and forsaken Becket 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 nes when he should appeale A masse of S. Steuen 〈◊〉 saue hym from hys enemies Becket answere to the Bishops ●●c●●t appealeth to Rome London appealeth from the Archbish. A masse to charme away persecutors Becket caryeth with hym the sacrament going
to the king Houeden referreth not this sai●ing to the Bishop of London but to the Archbishop of Yorke Becket called traytor of the king and of all hys nobles A blinde zeale for the proud liberties of the Church Who so taketh Beckets part is counted a rebells Becket cited to Rome vpon periury by the Byshops Becket condemned of periurie Becket cited to Rome Becket called to a full accompt Ex Rogero Houedeno Becket iudged to be layd in prison Ex quadripartita historia lib. 1 cap. 38. Becket appealeth to the Pope Becket thinketh not sufficient the protection of God without the pope Becket flyeth out of the court Becket chaungeth his name and is called Derman Histories differ something in the order of hys flight The Fr●●● king supporteth Becket agaynst the king of England Ambassadour 〈◊〉 to the 〈◊〉 Theories of the earl of A●●● to the 〈◊〉 The Pope r●●●dereth Beckets cause against the ●ing Becket cōplayneth of the king to the pope Repentance for his well doyng Beckets argument the Pope brought him not in but the K. Ergo God brought him not in And why might ye not M. Becket resigne it as well to his handes of whome ye tooke it A consultation betweene the Pope and the Cardinals about Beckets matter Becket in banishment 〈◊〉 yeares The kinges decrees Anno. 1166. Beckets kindred banished These monkes were of the Ciste●●an order Becket complayneth of his prince to the Pope To keepe vnder the pride of prelates is no cause sufficient to vnking a Prince If ye meane by spiritual things such as pertaine to the spirituall part of man I graunt but your liberties be not such as which pertayne to the inward or spirituall man but r●ther are thinges more corporall Pe●●●●yeth 〈…〉 bu● 〈◊〉 cause maketh 〈◊〉 true persecution 5. 6. 7. 9. * Note the Iudgement of God against this Becket who was slaine at his masse making the bodie of Christ. Answers the Popes letter Frede●ike falsly compared to Pharao but this was 〈◊〉 clawe the pope with●● Becket a stubburne trespasser Ergo no martyr A letter of Becket to the byshop of Norwych The Bishop of London excommunicated This Bishop was excommunicated because he set in the Deane of Salesbury without the licence of him being then beyōde the seas A s●ditious complaint of Becket to the pope against his king Godly articles condemned by Becket Becket reprehēded for complayning of his king Excommunication abused in priuate reuenge about lands and possessions The letters of the Byshops to Becket The cōmendation of K. Henry 2. 〈◊〉 his meekenes and moderation Scripture in wordes rightly aledged but falsly applyed I deny your Minor M. Becket The church of Christ cānot be ouerthrowen Ergo Bec. ought not to be resisted Seruitude and libertie of the Church wrongfully defined The wordes of holy scripture clarkely applyed Turne to thee Nay turne thou to the Lord and thou shalt be saued The soule of the Church is the libertie of the Church Faith Becket Vnbeseeming wordes of high presumption Christ is not iudged in the persons of any traytor Cōscience made where is none But he leaueth out here the ma●●r of his comming to the court and the sturdines of his behauiour Becket seemeth here more skilfull of his masse booke then of the booke of holy scripture either els hee might see it no new thing in the old law for kings to depriue priestes and to place whom they would Kings in the old law did not intermedle with the Priestes office in some thinges that were forbidden But yet kinges were officers ouer priestes to correct them when they did amisse If ye meane of Acha● and Oze in the old testament then we denie your Minor They be the successours and sonnes of ●aints not that holde the places of sainctes but that doe the workes of saints Hierom. If the king had bene an adulterer or tyrant against the true doctrine or preaching of Christ then might this reason serue and God more to be obeyed then mā Now where did Bec. learne that the king in his temporall right was not to be obeyed Take heede ye marre all and ye open that dore This Iohn was called ● schisma●●●● because he tooke pa●● with Reginald A●●● of Colen the Emperour against Alexander the Pope Clemen●● decree Diuers 〈◊〉 of excommunication The councel spea●● of such which be worthely excommunicated This Gregory other●●● called Hi●debrād 〈◊〉 he that 〈◊〉 tooke away priestes mariage condemning 〈◊〉 priestes for fornicators which had wiues Discussing of a true appellation The forme of a true appellation One person can not both be the appeale maker and the partie appealed Though the Popes lawe will not defend them yet the lawe of the scripture will and doth The letter of the Empresse to Becket Anno. 1169. Becket stirring vp the French king against the king of England A communication betweene Becket and the Cardinalles Beckets addition Becket would neither stand to iudgement nor triall Becket l●ueth ben● his bis●opricke th●● the peace ● the churchd for all his gaye talice Becket cōmeth in with his 〈◊〉 addition Saluo honore Die Becket ●●●ged with vnkinden● The kings offer to Becket both charitable and reasonable The words of the Frēc● king This maior if it had bin ioyned with a good Minor had made a good argument Exqua●ilogo Anno. 1170. The Bishop of London excommunicated with foure other Byshops suspēded The cause of the kinges wrath against Becket Becket returneth out of banishment Ex Rogerio Houedono The wordes of the king which were the cause of Beckets death If the Papistes will needes measure the successe of things by seasons and wether then must they by that reason condemne the cause of Becket his aduersaries hauing such forwardnes of wether in doing their feate The talke betwene the foure souldiers and Tho. Becket The stout heart of Becket Anno. 1171. The death of Tho. Becket What is to be thought or iudged of Thomas Becket What is to be thought whether Thomas Becket dyed a sainct or not The pu●●tion of ●●●ket iud●● not cau●● call Becket ●●●ged with presump●● and la●●● diser●tion Ambi●●● noted in Becket ●● not res●●● but ta●ing his promotion Byshop● against 〈◊〉 wils th●●● into their byshop●●● Ex chro●●co Nen●●●gensit Acta Beckets improbat● Ex Caesario Monacho lib. 8. dialo cap. 69. Whether Tho. Becket be saued or damned If God in these latter dayes geueth no mir●cles to glorifie the glory of his own sonne much lesse wil he giue myracles to glorifie Thomas Becket Liber de miraculis b. thomae autore monacho quodam Cantuar Miracles of Be● considered Aqua Cantuariensis Singing at the masse forbidden by Tho. Becket after his death A blasphemous lye Beck aboue the Martirs in heauen A place prepared in heauen for Becket xii yeares before his death An impudent and a lying myracle Ex historia monachs Canti●a de miraculiib Thomae A blasphemous vision A false and impudent myracle The blasphemous antheme 〈◊〉 Becket Tu per
Charta Charta de foresta The Pope raiseth warre Anno. 1226. The popes wicked malice against the Christian Earle of Tholouse Marke reader the right nature of pharisies striuing for the chiefe place The Pope geueth the right possessions away from the owners Reimundus wrongfully disherited by the Pope Reimundus the good Earle of Tholouse answereth for him selfe Albingenses falsly suspected for heresie The proud vilanie of the Popes Legate Marke reader the practise here of prelates for thy learning The clergie of Fraunce answering to the legate Inferiors euermore bolde to speake in difficult causes of trueth then the rich The obiect●ons of the clergie 〈◊〉 Fraunce against the Popes 〈◊〉 God graunt say we The Card●nall repulsed and defeyted of hi● purpose in Fraunce Ex Math. Parisiensi Pag. 63. The Pope rayseth was against the Earle the people of Tholouse ●e●timony 〈◊〉 the autor 〈◊〉 the cl●a●nge 〈◊〉 Reimun●s and of 〈◊〉 Albin●oles ●he vnrea●●nable ty●●nny of the ●ope against 〈◊〉 Tholos●ins ●●commu●●cation a●●sed ●wes the ●●ench king 〈◊〉 Romanus 〈◊〉 Popes ●●gate mar●ing against ●lbingenses ●eimundus ●●le of Tho●●use excom●unicated ●he citie of ●uinion be●●eged Po●licie of ●arre Famine and pestilence in the French campe The frēch souldiours destroied at the siege of Auinion Lewes the frēch kyng dyeth at the siege of Auinion The false dealing of the popes Legate in betraying the citie of Auinion The popes Legate wickedly periured Periury of the papistes The citie of Auinion taken by treason and periury of the popes Legate The number of the French soldiours in this siege destroyed The incontinent lyfe of these Romish prelate● to be noted Anno. 1227. The kyng claymeth to be freed from gouernours and to be his owne man Hubert the iustice made Earle of Kent The kyng vndoeth and dissolueth the liberties which before he graunted Practises of princes to set in money The citizens of London freed frō tole through all England Anno. 1228. Ex Fabiae part 7 Seditiō betwene the Romanes and the Pope The Popes Church may be iudged by their dissentions and schismes No peace in the Popes Church Dissention betweene the prior an● couent of Durham the kyng Canonicall election The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 sende● Rome ●gains● 〈◊〉 kyng Appel●●● to Rome ● gaynst 〈◊〉 kyng Ex Math. Paris Another ●● tention ●●tweene 〈◊〉 Monkes 〈◊〉 Couent● the C●nons of L●●field Ex Mat● Parisien● pag. 68. Stephe● 〈◊〉 Ate●o 〈◊〉 The ch●●t●rs of the bible 〈◊〉 stinc●●● by Stephen Langhto● An other conte●●● disten●●r 〈…〉 Monkes of Cante●bu●● and K. 〈◊〉 the third Obiection laide ag●●● the new Archb. Appea●● 〈◊〉 to R●● K. Henr. se●deth to 〈◊〉 Pope Tithe of amoueable goods in England 〈◊〉 Ireland pr●mised to the Pope for grauntin● the kin●●s sute 〈◊〉 sacra 〈◊〉 ●●pitie the 〈◊〉 will 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Pope● 〈◊〉 t● the election of Walter Archb. of C●●t No but whē your darling Tho. Becket came hee wa● heard without such communicat●●ns The election of Walter Archb. of Cant dissol●●e● of the P●pe for the kings mony Richarde chācelour of Lincolne ●ommended ●o the Pope ●o be Archb. ●f Cant. Richarde ●ade archb ●f Cant. by ●he Pope without election The effect of the Popes letters to the ●uffraganes of Cant. The pope beginneth first with a 〈◊〉 Ex Math. Paris This was a deare archb of Cant. bought with ●he tythes of ●ll England The Pope requireth the t●nthes of all the moueables in Englande Wales and Irelande The contentes of the Popes letters to the kyng The false pretēce of the pope vnder the name of the church wrekyng his owne cankered malice The kynges mouth stopped The Earles and Barons refused payment to the Pope The prelates in feare of the Popes curse Excommunication abused The Popes extortion Vsurers brought into England by the Pope to serue him with money Co●ne vpon the ground tythed to the Pope Ranulphus Erle of Chester denyeth to paye the Popes te●●hs Anno. 1229. The Church of Couentry finished The popes frēch army thinking to destroy Reimunde is deby the way The inconstant loue of Princes toward them that be chiefe about them Anno. 1230. A soden terrour among the people in Paules church by thunder and lightning Ex Paris Pag. 75. Anno. 1231. Richard Archb. of Cant. The complaint of Rich. Archb. of Cant. against Hubert L●rd chiefe iustice The kinges answere to Rich. the Archb. Excommunication abused Richard the archb complaineth to the pope of his ●ing 〈◊〉 of other matter 〈◊〉 Plurali●● 〈◊〉 benefi●es complained of by the Archbish. 〈◊〉 Cant. The king●● tournie● coulde 〈◊〉 speede 〈◊〉 the Pope Respect of person 〈◊〉 much with the Pope Richard the Archb. in 〈◊〉 iourney 〈◊〉 Rome 〈◊〉 Raffe 〈◊〉 B. of Chichester e●e●ted Archb. of Cant. The K. 〈◊〉 the Archb. 〈◊〉 Cant. Ex Math. Paris A rare ●●ample of ● good 〈◊〉 The pra●● of the 〈◊〉 elect Simō L●●●tō Arch● 〈◊〉 Yorke a ●licious ●●biter of ●●dolphus Archb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 she 〈…〉 the pope ●●cclection Radulfe ●rchb elect ●●et●d by 〈◊〉 Pope 〈◊〉 Archb. 〈◊〉 Cant. e●●ted 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 ●he popes ●ollerable ●actions ●pon Eng●●nd ●x Math. ●aris pa. 79. Hubert lord ●●hief Iustice 〈◊〉 worker a●ainst the ●ope ●he copy of ●he letter written vn●er the kings ●uthoritie ●o restraine ●he benefices of the Ro●●ns with●n the realm Anno. 1232. A Romayne priest Chanon of Paules taken and robbed by souldiours The barnes of a Romane parson broke vp and the corne distributed to the poore The Romanes and Italian parsons in England robbed of their rents and corne A general spoile of the Romayne parsons in England The popes cholar stirred vp against England A furnish vicare of milde Christ. Inquisitiō made for the spoyling of the popes corne Hubert de Burgo Robert Twing spoyled of his benefice by the Romaines The Byshops go about to bring Hubert out of the kings fauor Obiections laid against Hubert by the kyng Note that with Wint. the kyngs charter is no lōger in force then whilest he liueth Other crimes obiected to Hubert by the king Princ●● 〈…〉 be tru●● The kings disple●●● against ●●bert The king● messag● 〈◊〉 the Mar● of London Old 〈◊〉 borne ●n minde Some wi●● then 〈◊〉 Good 〈◊〉 of ●●●creet C●●●zens Cruel 〈◊〉 saile 〈◊〉 of Peter's of Wint. The 〈◊〉 of disple●● betweene Hubert an● the bi●t●s of Wint. Hubert ●●●strate vpo● the grou●● 〈◊〉 himselfe 〈◊〉 God Sage counsaile of an Erle giuē to the kyng ●he marue●●us wor●ng of the ●ords helpe 〈◊〉 time of ●eed Iuxta ●●rsum saith ●he storie 〈◊〉 ales alis ●lium ne lō●us ales ●x addita ●entis Mat. ●arisiensi ●ag 81. A notable ●xample of Gods iust ●unishment ●triking with ●eath him ●hat seeketh ●he death of ●nother Cōmendation of Radulf B. of Chichester The Archb. of Dubline againe maketh inter●ession for Hubert Hubert flyeth to the Church for his refuge Hubert violētly drawen out of the Church Hubert cast into the tower of Londō The kyng blamed for breaking the peace of holy Church The Kyng compelled to send
not their owne glory as false prophets doe Signe 30. is that true prophets doe not force vpon the solemne salutatiōs of men as false prophets doe Signe 31. is that false prophets resort to other mens bordes and flatter them for a m●ales meate which true prop●ets doe not Signe 32. is that true prophets doe not hate their enemies as false prophets doe Signe 33. is that true prophets do not persecute men as the false prophets doe Signe 34. is that true prophets preach to those which be not yet conuerted which the false prophets do not Signe 35. is that true prophets chiefly preach in their owne dioces and not in other mens Signe 36. is that fa●●● proph●●● attribute●● to themselues 〈◊〉 which t●●y neuer die Signe 37. is that false prophets ●o cleaue and leane to logicall and philosop●●call reaso● Signe 3● is that false prophets do loue carr●●l● and not spi●ituall● Signe 39. is that fal●e 〈◊〉 prophets is hunt after the friendship of the world Whatsoeue● doth perishe in the church of God for wāt of preachers shall be required A detestable booke of the Fryers called Euangelium ●●ernum The eternall and spiritual Gospell of the Fryers condemned with much a do of the Pope ●aurentius Anglicus condemned of the pope Desensio Gulielmi Ca●endum ● pseudo prophe●●s The Pope Antichrist The synagogue of Rome to be great Babylon Ex Nicolao Emerico in libro suarū inquisitionum Petrus Ioannes burned after his death Robertus Gallus prophesieth against the Pope The Pope described The visions of Robertus Gallus The state of the church of Rom● described The scholemen and the friuolous questions described The reformation of the church presignified The simonie and auarice of the clergie to be punished The story of R. Grostede Byshop of Lincoln Ex Nic. Triuet Rob. Grostede a Southfolke man borne The commendation of Rob. Grostede The bookes and workes of Rob. Grostede Anno. 1253. The death of R. Grostede Malleus Romanorum Grosthedus The trouble of R. Grost with the Pope An vnreasonable letter of the Pope * Recte dictum fortassis filio * Confectis The Pope● vnreasonable letter Excom●●nication ●bused A double ●ommenda●ion of B. Grosted The answer of R. Gro●●ed to the Pope Power giuē●o ministers to edificatiō only not to destruction Two principall princes of darknes Lucifer and Antichrist * He mea●ieth either Christ the Church or els Peter and Paule * Idest both to Christ and hi● Church Ex Ma● Paris ad verbu● Well sworne maister pope Giles Cardinall defendeth Rob●rt Grosted to the pope The godly talke of R. Grosted in time of his sicknes Heresis quid Definition of heresie The P. proued here an heretick The saying of Gregory The Pope accused of heresie Certain Aphorismes or articles layd of R. Grosted against the B. of Rome The Pope accused ●n his 〈◊〉 clause 〈…〉 The P●●●sed for ●●●gating 〈◊〉 then is 〈◊〉 to him 〈◊〉 proued 〈◊〉 to be equal but 〈◊〉 to his pre●●cessours The P●●● sed for r●●●ing the 〈◊〉 and foundations of his predecess●● Proued tha● the Pope ● liue is 〈◊〉 our to hi● predecess●● before him And therfore to ha● no authoritie to infringe the priuileg●es of other Popes Proued by example 〈◊〉 Benet th● men more auncien●●● time ough● to be pref●●red in higher reuer●●● The Pope accused for maintain●● of vsur● Against r●● re●s The 〈◊〉 practise of vsurers The Popes Vsurers worse then the Iewes Craftie subtil●ie of the Pope to get money Men signed to the holy land sold for money lyke sheepe by the Pope Remission of sinnes solde for money The Pope accused to be iniurious ●● churches in his prouisions and seleruations The Pope accused to be iniurious to the Abbot of S. Albons The Pope accused for violent extortion The Pope accused for troubling corrupting learned men of the spiritualtie with his temporal a●●ayres The Pope accused for vnlawfull dispensation Ex Mat. Paris The death of R. Grosted Byshop of Lincoln What the reuenues of the Popes Clarkes here in England came to by yeare Ex Cestrensis lib. 7. The Pope stroken with the staffe of Grost Bysh. of Lincoln Anno. 1254. Ex Mat. Paris Ex Fl●r hist. Senibalde pap● miserime The Popes new and true stile giuen by Grost Bish. of Lincoln The Pope disquieted in his minde The reuenge of God vpon pope Innocent The Popes army vanquished and confounded The death of Pope Innocent 4. Anno. 1255. A note to the reader concerning the appearing of dead men Dissention betwene the arch of Cant. and the Church of Lincolne Excommunication abused Appellation made to Rome Henry Lexintō B. of Lincolne A childe crucified of the Iews at Lincolne Ex Nic. Triuet Ex Cestrens l. 7 cap. 34. Ex Flor. hist. The Iewes expulsed out of Fraunce A childe ●●cumcised ● the Iewes and kept a whole yeare to be cruc●fied The Iewe● aske leaue to depart the realme of England Ex E●lo●● Iewes burned at N●●thampton A Iewe fa●len into a priuey wold not be take● out for keeping his Sabboth day Superstitious falling noted in Walter arch of Yorke Ex Flo. hist. Superstition in seeking saluation by wronge meanes The Pope iniurious to the Church of England A prebendship of pa●●s giuen both of the Pope and of the king at one time to two seuerall persons The Popes donation preferred before the kinges Two Romain clarkes going to complaine were 〈…〉 the way The story of Mat. Paris here ceaseth Pope Alexander 3. ma●er warre The Popes army slaine Lewlinus K. of Wales war●eth against the kyng Lewlinus the K. cōcorded Ex Polychro nico lib. 7. Ex autore Eulogij Anno. 1257. Pope Alexander to make shifte for money ma●eth the king beleue his sonne should be kyng of Apulia Richa●de the kings brot●er made king of Almaine What c●●ill discorde worketh worketh Resignation of the Earled●me of Normandy and Ang●ew Ex Gual Gisburn The conflict skirmish betweene the Northern Welth men and the Southern men in Oxford Variance betweene ●he studentes and the Friers in Paris Variance betweene the Vniuersitie of Oxforde and Cambridge Variance betweene the Archb. of Cant. and the chapter of Lincolne Variance betweene the Archb. of Cant. and the chapter of London Ex Flor. ●●st Litle peace in the Popes Church Histori●s profitable for example The occasions of commotion betweene the kyng and the Nobles Anno. 1260. Straungers hauing all the wealth of the realme vnder the kyng Ex Gualt Gisburnensi The wordes of the Nobles to the kyng The K. g●●● teth to ●● Lordes A sitting ●● the king and Lordes at Oxford The proui●●ons or law●● ma●e at Oxforde The King swearet● to the prou●●ons ma●● a● Oxford The kinges brethren ●gainst the prouisions of Oxford The proui●●ons of O●forde Ex histori● G●alte●● Gisburnensis God grau●● this lawe might take place agai●● God gra●●● the like 〈◊〉 againe fo● the wealth of the realm Diuers in this coun●● impoiso●t The kyn● repente●●● his othe Anno. 1261. The K. sneth to the pope
speke against the pride of prelates and their excessiue dignities All be Pagans with the Pope that like not his superstitious and idolatrous traditions A great difference betweene a rouing mother and the fratike whore of Babilon We fooles thought their life to be madnes and their ende without honour Sapiens 5. Et os eius sicut os Le●nis 1. And his mouth is like the mouth of a Lyon Apoc. 13. Draconis lex saguine scripta The popes religiō hath left all sence of humanit●e * Et vidi bestiam ●●ges terrae excercitus corum pugnantes cum illo qui ●eceoat in equo exercitu eius Apoc. 13. Et data est illi potestas in omnem t●ibum et populum et linguam gentem 1. And power is geuen him ones all tribes and people and tongues and nations c. Apoc. 13. Note the tendernes of this louing mother the Church of Rome Et facies omnes pun●●●s et ●●●g●● dinites et ●auperes et ic●uos accipere characterern in manu sua dextra 1. And he shall make both little and great riche and poore free bond to take his character in their right hand c. Apoc. 13. Satan ratteleth his chaines The olde maner of the popishe othe Speaking of the inuisible church the article is true This article seemeth to be wrasted out of the wordes of Hierome of Prage The papa●● dignit●● touc●●d Iohn Hus expoundeth this article with this distinct non ratione meriti sed ratione officii Iohn Hus declareth his mind touching this article sufficiently before Election maketh not the successor of Pet. but immitation One head of the vniuersall church beside Christ hath no foundation in all scripture The forme and maner of the popes inquisition Heresie to p●ay for l. Wickliffe or ●●●lus c. Heresie not to beleeue the councell of Constāce Heresie to ●●●ster in both kindes Heresie to deny the Popes indulgences Heresie not to worship images These Popes wil be sure to lose nothing Wealthy wickednes maintained The pope neyther preacheth himselfe nor yet will suffer other good priests to preach Papa spirat minas caedes See here the Dragon casting out whole floudes to swalow vp the Sainte● Pope Martin 5. contrary to Pope Boniface 8. Pope Martyn vndoeth the a●is and edictes of al other popes Note howe Antichrist rageth and ryleth against christ Mans power and counsaile too weake against christ An exhortation of the Bohemians The Pope and prelates by their letters stirred them to flight Faire words doe make fooles faine The Pope seduceth the world with vaine promises of thinges which he cannot geue The deuil the Pope ●iche in pro●ising and poore in ge●●ng Galat. 6. False pretenses of the papistes M. Hus Hierom by wrongful violence put to death Christ heard the deuill b● the pope wil not heare men confesse their fayth 2. Esdras 3. Iohn 14. Iohn 8. A iust and ly reques●● Bohemi●● Wherefore the popes clergie wil abide no cōference with the laytie The Popes pretensed excuse detected Rom. 1. Experience of Gods blessing where the pope hath cursed Obiection Aunswere The popes false accusation answered Math. 15. The abuse of popishe religion in making priests Cardia● ls c. Actes 8. The abuse of popishe religion in taking orders Popishe excommunication abused 1. Cor. 16. The pope● church poysoned with buying and selling their praying and singing and all their doing for money Feare of purgatory hath robbed almost all the whole world So long as priestes be rich they will neuer be true teachers The subtiltie of the deuill in making the church rich Eccle. 19. Popishe priests with their long sumtuous gownes more like to the Pharises then Christ. 1. Tim. 3. Honor in well gouerning The popes church poysoned with couetousnes Tim. 1. The popes church poysoned much with who●e dome The Popes church and monasteries commonly poysoned with deuelishe enuie The popes church poysoned with idlenes and belly cheare The Popes church infamous with notorious lies The Popes church erreth in diminishing one part of the Sacrament The Popes church charged with partialitie He meaneth of claiming tithes by mere necessitie of the olde lawe and not by the positiue law of princes The Popes church charged with vsury He meaneth the immoderate riches tēpo all possessions Mē appointed to preach may preach t●oagh the Pope forbid them When the Pope holdeth his councell let mē looke to their wiues daughters where the councell is kept Ex vetustissimo codice manuscripto Great lamētatiō for Zisca The army of Zisca deuided The order and po●●cie that the armie of Zisca vsed in warre after his decease Procopius Magnus Sigismund the Emperor which burned Hus and Hierom before now is fayne to entreat for hys kingdome The death of I. Hus Hierome reuenged The Cardinall of Winchester sent into Germany to rayse warre agaynst the Bohemians Three armies set against the Bohemians God rescueth his people newly conuerted The popes army flyeth Lyke captayne lyke souldiour Anno. 1421. The Pope rayseth warre the second time against the Bohemians A newe warre raysed by the pope against the Bohemians The number of the popes army against the Bohemians Cardinall Iulian with a maine host entreth Boheme The cruell slaughter done by the Cardinall God striketh a feare in the popes army * Rather for the religion of Antichrist This Cardinall belike loued to preach rather in the campe thēin the church The Cardinals army ranne away for feare Great slaughter in Boheme by Duke Albert The councel of Basill A letter of the Emperour to the Bohemians The Bohe●ians sent for by the Councell Safeconduct geuen to the Bohemians to come to the councell A doubt among the Bohemians whether to goe to the councell of Basill or no. This Maynardus was after a great backfriend to the faithful Bohemians 300. horsemen of the Bohemians sent Ambas to the councell This english man was Peter Paine The receiuing of the Bohemians at Basill Procopius famous among the Germaynes The oration of Cardinall Iulian. The Bohemians aunswere to the Cardinals oration The articles wherin the Bohemians dissented from the church of Rome Certaine appointed by the Bohemians and the councell to dispute The death of K. Henry 5. called prince of priests for fauouring the pope King Henry 6. Anno. 1422. Ex Scala mundi Ex Regist. Cant. William Taylour the first tyme apprehended W. Taylour againe appeareth before the Archbishop Three articles first obiected to W. Taylour The forme of canonical absolution in the church vsed against th● that were excommunicate The opinion of Wil. Taylour cōcerning worshipping of Saintes Cultus latriae that is worship which is onely due to God Ang. super Psal. 21. 4. articles by the 4. orders of Friers laid against W. Taylour W. Taylour disgraded W. Taylour Martir burned in Smithfield The popes maner of degradation Iohn Florence● a Turner He meanet●they should claime such ●●thes by any exaction Anno. 1424. The maner
of this displing was withawhite rodde thrise laid vpon the head of the penitenciary He meaneth the wicked byshops of that time whose curses God did blesse This proueth Sir I. Oldecastle to be no traytour The wordes of ha Register Iohn Goddesell of Dichingham Sir Hugh Pye Priest Image of the crosse not to be worshipped A letter of the king William Bishop of Norwich William Bernhā hys Chaūcelor A cataloge of good mé and women troubled for suspition of heresie Bonermight see the church here in this age more then xl yeres before he was borne These men are falsely slaundered about Baptisme The papistes are but quarel pickers Articles * In case of necessitie vrgent they meane The death of Thomas Becket In this article is ment that the wicked be in the church but not of the Church W. White Martyre Anno. 1428. ●● Waldeno * Eccle. 50. 〈◊〉 The Romi●● church ap●● resembled to the cu●sed fig●uce The bishops man smit●th him on the mouth exhorting the people Father Abraham Iohn Waddon priest martyrs and burned A letter of the bishop of Norwich The maner at the popes penaunce Iohn Beuerley * alias sustigated Iohn Skilley The penance of Iohn Skilley Margery Backster A woman brought in for witnes in the popes court The Bee will stinge Against Images The sacrament is not God Tho. Becket a traytour Thomas Becket slain not before the aulter but in his flying Father Abraham W. White I. Wadden Against the popes fasting dayes W. Whyte willing to speake at the stake was stroken on the mouth Agaynst auricular confession Against Image worship Iohn Piry Iohn Būgay Iohn Vsher. William Euerden W. Tailour of Ludney The wife daughter of Tho. Moone Rich. Fletcher Nicho. Belware A new testament then cost 4. markes and ●● pence Tho. Grem ●●r I. Clarke W. Bate W. Skiruing W Osberne Iohn Rene. Bawdwin Cooper Iohn Pert. Sir Hugh Pie Priest I. Perker A prophesi Ex Regist. Norw Iohn Burrell Lent fast fishe dayes Pilgrimage to the poore Masses for the dead vnprofitable Tho. Moone of Ludney William White Hugh Pye Thomas Pert. W. Callis priests persecuted Robert Grigges of Martham Articles Iohn Finch of Colchester Popishe penāce Nicholas Canō of Eye Anno. 1431. Depositions If the Sacramēt be very fleshe then the priests eat fleshe on Friday Nicholas Canon turned his backe to the sacrament An other examination of Nicholas Canon Articles obiected The iudgement of the Prior and doctors vpon his articles An heresie to doubt whether the sacrament be the perfect body of Christ or no. Nicholas Canon declared an hereticke Penance enioyned to Nicholas Canon Tho. Bageley priest Martir Paule Craw marti● Ex Hector Boer●o Tho. Rhedonensis Martir Ex Antonin 3. parte host fol. 165. Tho. Rhedoneasis cōmeth into Italy The golden citie of Rome All thinges corrupt at Rome The wickednes pride that raigneth at Rome The corruptiō of Rome will admitte no reformation Pictie rewarded with persecutiō Heresie made where none ●s Popery armed with policie and def●nded with tirannie His articles Ex Antonin 3. part hist fol 165 W. Cardinalis Rhotomagensis his pe●●ecat●ur Tho. Rhe●onensis brought before Pope Eugenius Thomas degraded Tho. Rhedonēsis a French man burned at Rome Henry Grunfelder priest Henry Radtgeber priest Ioh. Draendorfe priest Pet. Thoraw Mat. Hager Martyrs Pope Eugenius 4. The Councell of Basil. Ex Aenea Syluio Ex Cocleo in Hist. Husut Et ex paralipom Abbat Vrsperg The death of P. Martin Pope Eugenius 4. Pope Eugenius seeketh to dissolue the councell of Basill Dissention betweene the councell of Basill and Pope Eugenius The prelats of the councell refused the Popes request The princes assembled at Mentz to make vnitie betweene the councell the pope Three opinion touching the Pope The Ambassadours returne frō Mentz The Popes heresie discussed The bishop of Millaine taketh Eugenius part for feare of a schisme Conclusions of the disputation Panormitane speaketh againe for the Pope Articles of faith deuided into 3. sortes Panormitane preferreth the iudgement of the Cardinals of Rome before all the world The pope pretendeth the vniting of the Greekes when he meaneth an other thing The pope no relaps but prolaps Iohn Segouius answereth to Panormitane The pope neglecting to doe good is a member not of christ but of the deuil Councels boūd to no positiue lawe Panormita● appointeth the Pope Lord of the Church The Pope the clergy desire dominion contrary to the scriptures The French kinges Ambassadour The Byshop of Burgen The councel aboue the Pope The force of truth which appeared also in Eneas himselfe the writer hereof although afterwarde when he was pope he denied the same Note what it is a man to labour against hys knowledge The conclusions of the disputation The first cōclusion A king is not of more authoritie then is his kingdome These kinde of flatterers came now in our daies What a king is The institu●● of kings The pope ought to be subiect vnto the councell This place Tu es Petrus c. expounded Sinnes are the gates of hell Against the papittes opinion that the pope can not erre The interpretatiō of this place Oraui pro te Petre. is ment of the Church Bishops of Rome are heretiques He meaneth Siluester the secōd The church is without sinne the pope is a sinner The church one flesh with christ The Church is without spot or sinne is to be vnderstand not by nature but onely by imputation The church with out sinne how to be vnderstand The errour of those which say that onely the virgin Mary did perseuer constāt at the time of ●hristes passion The Church comprehendeth both the euill and good Math. 20. This saying of Ecclesiastes is not translated also serueth to other sense then is here ment Christ is the rocke wherupon the Church is builded He proueth by authoritie the pope to be vnder the coūcell If the Church be the mother the Pope must be her sonne The church being the spouse the pope cā not be the head therof but he must also be the head of Christ forsomuch as Christ his spouse be both one The exposition of this place quodcunque ligaueris The church may depose the pope if he abuse the keyes The church and not the pope compared to the Sunne The pope if he do not harken to the church is an Ethnicke and Publicane It is to be feared least the church hath had many such Popes Whether the pope is to be iudged by the generall councell c These are the Canons and the schoole diuines and begging friers Diuersitie of iudgementes touching the B. of Rome How folishly the church of Rome doth wrast the the scriptures neglecting the expositions of the fathers Those thinges which were spokē of the church serue also for the generall councell Peter representeth the double person Christ nameth the Church b●● twise in the Gospell What the Church is The interpretatiō of this place dic ecclesiae The church taken for the
among vs of this age of the Church but also among the Auncient fathers Whereof S. Austen speaking of his commendation sayth Ego inquit literas Cypriani non vt canonicas habeo sed eas ex canonisis considero quod in eis deuinarum Scripturarum autoritati congruit cum laude eius accipio quod autem non congruit cum pace eius respuo c. By which words it may appeare that Austen although he did not repute y● bookes and writings of Cyprian to be equiualent with the holy Scripture yet notwithstanding next after the scriptures he had the same in great admiration Vincentius and Laziardus Celestinus recyting the names of dyuers bookes bearyng the tytle of Cyprian moe perchaunce then be truly his do collect out of them a certaine extract of his most pithy sentences al which here to repeat were to tedious To giue a tast of the speciall I thought it not impertinent As where he speaking of the treasures of a rich man exhorteth saying Ne dormiat in thesauris tuis quod pauperi prodesse potest● i. Let it not sleepe in thy treasures that may profite the poore Duo nunquam veterascunt in homine cor semper nouas cogitationes machinando lingua cordis vanas conceptiones proferendo i. Two things neuer waxe old in man the hart euer in imagining new cogitations the toung euer in vttering the vaine conceptions of the hart Quod aliquando de necessitate amittendum est sponte prodiuina remuneratione distribuendum est .i. That which a man must needes forgo of necessitie wisedome it is a man to distribute so that God may euerlastingly reward him Disciplina est morum praesentium ordinata correctio malorum praeteritorum regularis obseruatio i. Discipline is an ordinate amendment of maners present and a regular obseruation of euils past Integritas ibi nulla esse potest vbi qui improbos damnent desunt soli qui damnentur occurrunt There can be no integrity wheras they which should condemne the wicked are euer wanting and they only which are to be condemned are euer present Auari ad hoc tantum possident quae habent vt ne alteri possidere liceat A couetous man onely possesseth his goodes for this because an other should not possesse them Sericum purpurum indutae Christum induere non possunt Wemen that aduaunce themselues in putting on silks and purple cannot lightly put on Christ. Foeminae crines suos inficiunt malo praesagio Capillos enim sibi flammeos auspicari non metuunt They which colour their lockes with red and yealow beginne betime to prognosticate of that colour theyr heades shall be in hell Qui se pingunt in hoc seculo aliter quam creauit Deus metuant ne cum resurrectionis venerit dies artifex creaturam suam non recognoscat They which loue to paynt themselues in this world otherwise then God hath created thē let them feare least when the day commeth of resurrection the creator will not know them Qui pauperi eleemosinam dat Deo suauitatis odorem sacrificat He that gyueth an almes to the poore sacrificeth to God an odour of swete smell Contemnenda est omnis iniuria praesentium molorum fiducia futurorum bonorum All iniurie of euils presēt to be neglected for the good hope of good thinges to come Nihil prodest verbis proferre virtutem factis destruere To set out vertue in wordes and to destroy the same in factes is nothing worth Quo plures domi sint tibi liberi hoc plus tibi non recondendum sed erogandum est quia multorum iam delicta redimenda sunt multorum purgandae conscientiae The mo children and greater houshoulde thou hast at home the more cause thou hast not to horde vp but to disperse abroode for that many sinnes are to be redeemed many consciences are to be purged ¶ Moreouer least the Papists here should take an occasion by this text grounded vpon the text of Tobi cap. 4. Almose saith he deliuereth from al sinne and death to build vp the workes of satisfactiō the said Cyprian Lib. 4. Epist 2. more plainely expoundeth both himselfe and that place of Scripture writing in these wordes Quia scriptum est Eleemosina ab omni peccato morte liberat Yob 4. non vtique ab ea morte quam semel Christi sanguis extinxit a qua nos salutaris Baptismi tedemptoris nostri gratia liberauit sed ab illa quae per delicta postmodum serpit c. That is Almose doth deliuer from all sinne and from death Yob 4. not from that saith Cyprian which the bloude of Christ hath once extincted and from which the wholsome grace of our Baptisme and of our redeemer hath deliuered vs but frō that death which afterward creepeth in by sinne c. Cyprian Lib. 4. Epist. 2. by which words it is apparant that Cyprian meaneth this deliueraunce which commeth by almose gyuing from death and sinne not to be expounded nor to be taken for death euerlasting from which only the bloude of Christ doth saue vs but for temporall or transitory punishment which is wont to be inflicted in this body of sin For so it is nothing repugnaunt but that temporall vertues may haue their temporall rewards in this life likwise sinnes committed may haue temporal punishments both of vs and in our families our eternal saluation standing euermore firme in Christ yet notwithstanding The foresaide Vincentius moreouer speaking of an other booke of Cyprian although the said booke be not numbred in the Catalogue of his workes maketh mention of xij abuses or absurdities in the life of man which in order be these 1. Sapiens sine operibus A wise man without good workes 2. Senex sine religione An old man without religion 3. Adolescens sine obedientia A young man without obedience 4. Diues sine eleemosina A rich man without almose 5. Foemina sine pudicitia A woman shameles 6. Dominus sine virtute A guide without vertue 7. Christianus contentiosus A Christian man contentious 8. Pauper superbus A poore man proude 9. Rex iniquus A king vnrighteous 10. Episcopus negligens A byshop negligent 11. Plebs sine disciplina People without discipline 12. Populus sine lege Subiectes without law As I haue hetherto set forth the commendation of Cyprian this blessed Martyr so must we nowe take heede againe that we do not here incurre the old common daunger whiche the Papystes are commonlye accustomed to runne into whose fault is alwayes almost to be immoderate and excessiue in their procedings making to much almost of euery thing So in speaking of the holye Sacraments they make more of them then doth the nature of Sacraments require not vsing them but abusing thē not referring or applying them but adoring them not taking thē in their kind for thinges godly as they are but taking thē for God himselfe turning religion into
superstition the creature to the creator that things signifying to the things them selues signified c. To the Church likewise and ceremonies of the church to generall Councels to the blessed virgin Mary mother of Christ to the bishop of Rome and to all other in like case not contented to attribute that which is sufficient they exceede moreouer the bounds of iudgement and veritie iudging so of the Church general coūcels as though they could neuer or did neuer erre in any iote That the blessed mother of Christ amongest al women was blessed and a virgine ful of grace the Scripture truth doth giue but to say that she was borne without al original sinne or to make of her an aduocate or mother of mercy there they run further then truth wil beare The ceremonies were first ordained to serue but onely for order sake vnto the which they haue attributed so much at length that they haue set in them a great part of our Religion yea also saluation And what thing is there els almost wherein the Papistes haue not exceeded Wherfore to auoyd this common error of the papists we must beware in cōmending the Doctors writers of the Church so commend them that truth and consideratiō go with our cōmendation For though this cannot be denied but that holy Cyprian and other blessed Martyrs were holy men yet notwithstanding they were men that is such as might haue had their falles faultes men I say not aungels nor gods saued by God not sauiours of men nor patrons of grace and though they were also men of excellent learning worthy Doctors yet with theyr learning they had their errors also annexed And though their bookes be as they ought to be of great authority yet ought they not to be equall with the Scriptures And albeit the saide well in most things yet it is not therefore inough that what they said it must stande for a truth That preeminence of authority onely belongeth to the worde of God and not to the pen of man For of men and Doctors be they neuer so famous there is none that is voyde of his reprehension In Origene although in his time the admiratiō of his learning was singuler yet how many things be there which the Church nowe holdeth not but examining him by Scriptures where he sayd well they admit him where otherwise they leaue him In Polycarpus the church hath corrected and altered that which he did holde in celebrating the Easter day after the Iewes Neither cā holy and blessed Ignatius be defended in al his sayings as where he maketh the fasting vpon the Sonday or the Sabboth day as great an offence as to kil Christ him selfe Ignat Epist. ad Phillip contrary to this saying of Saint Paule Let no man iudge you in meate drinke Also where the said Ignatius speaketh De virginitate and of other thinges mo Irenaeus did hold that man was not made perfect in the beginning He seemeth also to defend free will in man in those thinges also that be spirituall He saye● that Christ suffered after he was fifty yeares old abusing this place of the Gospell Quinquaginta annos nondum habes c. Tertulianus whom S. Cyprian neuer laide out of his handes almost is noted to be a Chiliaste also to haue bene of Mōtanus sect The same did hold also with Iustine Cyprian other that the Aungels fel first for the concupiscence of women Lib. de habitu mulierum He defendeth fre wil of man after the corruption of nature inclining also to the errour of them which defend the possibilitie of keeping God his law Cōcerning Mariage Vnum matrimonium inquit nouimus sicut vnum Deum i. We know sayth he one Mariage as we know one God condemning the second maryage Lib de Monogam Diuers other things of like absurditie in him be noted Iustinus also seemeth to haue inclined vnto the errour of the Chiliastes of the fall of certaine Aungels by wemen offree will or man of possibilitie of keeping the lawe and such other Neither was this our Cyprian the great schooler of Tertulian vtterly exempt from the blot of them who contrary to the doctrine of the Church did hold with rebaptising of such as were before Baptised of heretikes Whereof speaketh S. Austen myslyking the same errour of Cyprian in these words contained in his 2. booke Contra Cresconium Cypriani inquit laudem ego consequi non valeo eius multis literis mea scripta non comparo eius ingenium diligo eius ore delector eius charitatem miror eius Martyrium veneror Non accipio quod de baptisandis haereticis schismaticis sensit c. Uppon the whiche matter there was a great contention betwene the sayd Cyprian and Stephen Bishop of Rome as partly afore is note● Of Austen himselfe likewise of Ambrose Hierome Chrisostome the same maye be said that none of them also clearely passed away but their peculiar faultes and errours went with them whereof it were to long and out of our purpose at this present to entreate And thus much concerning the story of Cyprian the holy learned Martyr of Christ. Albeit here is to be noted by the way touching the life and story of Cyprian that this Cyprian was not he whome the narration of Nazianzen speaketh of as is aboue mentioned who from Arte Magicke was conuerted to bee a Christian which Cyprian was a Citizen of Antioche and afterward Bishop of the same Citie and was Martyred vnder Diocletian Where as this Cyprian was Byshop of Carthage and died vnder Valerianus as is sayd c. By the decrees of Gratiā Dist. x. Quoniam it appeareth moreouer that there was also a third Cyprian in the time of Iulianus the Emperour Apostata long after both these aforenamed For so giueth the title prefixed before the saide Distinct Cyprianus Iuliano Imperatori the distinction beginning Quoniam idem mediator Dei hominum homo Christus Iesus he actibus proprijs dignitatibus distinctis officia potestatis vtriusque discernit c. Upon the which distinctiō the glose commeth in with these words saying that the popedome and the seate Imperial haue both one beginning of one that is Christ who was both Bishoppe and king of Kings And that the said dignities be distincted albeit the Pope notwithstanding hath both the swords in his hand and may exercise them both some time And therefore although they be distincted yet in exercise the one standeth lineally vnder the other so that the imperiall dignitie is subiect vnder the Papall dignitie as the inferiour is subiect vnder the superiour that as there is one ruler ouer the whole which is God so in the Church is one Monarche that is the Pope to whom the Lord hath committed the power and lawfull right both of the heauenly and terrene dominion Haec Glosa Thus much I thought here
and bridle him withall that peace thereby and loue might dwell vppon the face of the earth But alas the B. of Rome sitting in the chaire of peruerse doctrine or pestilence that Pharisee anoynted wyth the oyle of iniquitie aboue the rest of his consortes in this our time which for his abhominable pride is fallen from heauen indeuoureth with his power to destroy and vndoe all and thinketh I beleeue to stellifie againe himselfe there from whence hee fell Hys purpose is to darken and to shadowe the light of our vnspotted life whilest that altering the veritie into lies his Papall letters stuft with all vntruthes are sent into sondry partes of the world of his owne corrupt humor and vpon no reasonable cause blemishing the sinceritie of our Religion The Lord Pope hath compared vs vnto the beast rising out of the sea full of names of blasphemy and spotted like a Lyberd But we say that he is that mōstrous beast of whom it is sayd and of whome we thus read And there shall come an other red horse out of the sea and hee that shall sit on him shall take peace away out of the earth let them therefore that dwell vpon the earth destroy him For since the tyme of hys promotiō he hath not ben the father of mercy but of discord A dilligent steward of desolation in stead of consolation and hath intised all the worlde to commit offence And to take the wordes in right sense and interpretation he is that great Dragon that dath deceiued the whole worlde hee is that Antichrist of whom he hath called vs the forerunner he is that other Balaam hired for money to curse vs the Prince of darcknes which hath abused the Prophetes This is the Aungel leaping out of the sea hauing his Phials fild with bitternes that he may both hurt the sea and the lande the counterfait Vicar of Christ that setteth forth hys owne imaginations He sayth that we doe not rightly beleue in the Christen fayth and that the world is deceiued with three maner of deceiuers which to name God forbid we should open our mouth seeing that openly we cōfesse onely Iesus Christ our Lord and Sauiour to be the euerlasting sonne of God coequall with hys father and the holy Ghost begotten before all worldes and in processe of tyme sent downe vpon the earth for the saluation of mankinde Conceaued not by the seede of man but by the holy Ghost which was borne of the glorious virgin Mary after that suffered and dyed as touching the flesh and by hys Godhead the third day he raysed from death that other nature which he assumpted in the wombe of his mother But we haue learned that the body of Machomet hangeth in the ayre and that his soule is buryed in hell whose works are damnable contrary to the law of the most highest We affirme also that Moyses was the faythfull seruant of God and a true teacher of the law and that he talked with God in mount Sinay vnto whō the Lord sayd Rubrum c. By whō also God wrought miracles in Egipt and deliuered the law written to the Israelites that afterwards with the elect he was called to glory In these and other thinges our enemy and enuier of our state causing our mother the church to accuse her sonne hath written agaynst vs venemous and lying sclaunder and sent the same to the whole worlde If hee had rightly vnderstoode the Apostles meaning he woulde not haue preferred his violent will before reason which beareth such sway with him neither would he haue sēt out his Mandates to the suggestion of those which call light darcknes and euill good whiche suspect hony to be gall for the great good opinion they haue cōceaued of that holy place which in deed is both weak infirm cōuerteth al truth into falshood affirmeth that to be that is not Truly my opinion so indifferent on euery side ought not in any case to be infringed and auerted from the fayth to such enemies of so corrupt a conscience Wherefore we greatly are inforced not a little to meruaile which thing also doth much disquyet vs to see that you which be the pillers and assistentes in office of righteous dealing the Senators of Peters Citie and the principal beames in Gods building haue not quallified the perturbation of so fierce a Iudge as doth the planets of heauē in their kynd which to mittigate the passing swift course of the great orbe or sphere of heauen draw a contrary way by theyr opposite mouinges In very deed our Imperial felicitie hath bene almost euen from the beginning spurned agaynst and enueied at of the papall see and dignitie As Simonides being demanded why he had no mo enemies and enuiers of hys state answered and sayd quia nibil falsciter gessi for because sayth he I haue had no good successe in any thing that euer I tooke in hand And so for that we haue had prosperous successe in all our enterprises the Lordes name be blessed therefore especially in the ouerthrow of late of our rebellious enemies the Lombardes to whom in their good quarrell he promised life and absolution and remission of their sinnes is the cause wherefore this Apostolicall bishop mourneth and lamenteth And now not by your councels I suppose he laboureth to impugne this our felicitie but of hys owne power of bynding losing wherof he glorieth so much he impugneth it But presently where power and habilitie wanteth to redresse there doth abuse take place We see in hym which was so mighty a king and the worthiest prince amongst all the Prophetes to desire craue the restitution of Gods holy spirit when he had polluted the dignitie of hys office But the prouerbe is Vti indissolubilia non solnuntur ita inligabilia non ligantur As thinges indissoluble are not to be losed so thinges that cannot be bound are not to be bound Which thing manifestly is proued in him For why the scriptures of God doe instruct men how to liue they mortifie our soules whiche are immortall and quicken the same whiche are dead for want of lyfe And doubtles he is able to humble and bring downe those that are vnworthy of dignitie as much as him pleaseth and when him pleaseth Doubtlesse if the Byshop of Rome were a true Byshop indeed innocent impolute and not associate with wicked liuers and euill men his life should declare him so to be He would not then be an offerer of dissentious sacrifice but a peaceable offerer of loue charity would cense not with the incense of griefe hatred but with the sweet smelling incense of concord and vnity neither yet would alter suum pontificium in maleficium That is make of a sanctified office an execrable abuse If he were such a Byshoppe as he ought to be he would not wrest or abuse the preaching of the word into the fruite and gayne of his owne dissention neither