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A13025 A generall treatise against poperie and in defence of the religion by publike authoritie professed in England and other churches reformed. VVherein they that either want leisure to read, or that haue not iudgement to conceiue, or that are not able to buie the learned treatises of other concerning particular points of religion, may yet euidently see poperie not to be of God, and our religion to be acceptable in his sight. Very necessarie for these times, for the confirmation and strengthening of men in our religion, that neither by Iesuits, nor by any other, they may be drawne to poperie, or any other heresie or sect: and likewise for the winning of Papists and atheists to an vnfained liking and true profession of our religion. By Thomas Stoughton minister of the word Stoughton, Thomas. 1598 (1598) STC 23316; ESTC S113794 180,055 360

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church least also touching those things that I haue gathered out of their seruice bookes any should imagine them to be such as they themselues should now disclaime I haue sufficiently preuented these obiections in the addition it selfe shewing that the authors by me here tra●uced had great allowance from the Popes owne vnholines and were of high estimation in their churches and likewise proouing their ancient seruice books in the things here expressed not to differ frō their new books newly reformed by the coūcil of Trēt neither yet to be any whit in a manner now reuoked Much other the like popish trash I might haue noted out of other the like popish bookes but to avoid tediousnes vnto other I did the more willingly spare my owne paines Thus committing your selues with the successe of these my labours vnto the Lord who worke both in you and in me more perfect hatred of popery and all other errours and more vnfained loue of his truth that we may the better continue therein and be the more plentiful in all the fruits thereof I do louingly take my leaue of you frō Billerim in Essex the seuenth of March in the yeere of our Lord according to the cōputation of the church of England 1597. almost nowe ended Yours in the Lord vnfainedly Thomas Stoughton The generall summe of all all things comprehended in this treatise following The reasons why this worke was taken in hand and the state of this cause beeing first breefly declared then followe these generall arguments against popery and for our religion 1 All true religion and acceptable to God is wrought in the hearts of men by the ministerie of God his word conteiued in holy scripture Popery is not wrought by the ministerie of that worde in as much as where that word is most plentifully sincerely taught there popery most falleth and where that word is wanting there popery most abounde as also because papists will neither voluntarily come nor by authority be drawne either to the preaching or reading thereof in our Churches neither doe delight in the priuate reading thereof at home ergo Popery is not true religion c. 2 All true religion is vpheld and maintained by good and lawefull meanes needing no euill vnlavvefull meanes to vphold it But popery is vpheld and maintained by all vnlawfull meanes as by force and violence by fire and fagot corrupting adding vnto and diminishing the text of scriptures by false alleadging the authorities of men by clipping and mangling the works of the auncient fathers both in citing their testimonies and also in printing of the bookes themselues by authority of the popish church by lying miracles and such other indirect meanes ergo c. 3 The subiect matter of true religion is contained in the written word of God The subiect mat of poperie is not comprised in that written worde of God but is directly contrarie therevnto in all the principall points thereof ergo c. 4 The forme of true religion is also comprehended in the canonicall Scripture The forme of poperis is not there comprehended but is altogether diuers from the forme of God his worship in that word prescribed yea rather poperie hath in a manner no worship of God at all ergo 5 All true religion referreth all things to God his glorie Poperie referreth not all things to God his glorie but so aduanceth the Pope saints and man himselfe that it spoileth God of all his glorie ergo 6 True religion bringeth forth obedience to the ●orall law of God contained in the tenne commandements Poperie and not Papists onely baingeth forth no such obedience but transgresseth euery one of these commaundements and that in the highest degree ergo 7 True religion worketh true ioy and sound comfort in euery heart where it taketh true place as certifying she same both of the present fauour of God and also of the continuance thereof Poperie worketh no such ioy and comfort as the which depriueth men of the Scriptures whereby their eyes are to be opened and their mindes instructed in true wisdome as the which teacheth likewise that it is presumption for a man to say that he is perswaded of God his fauour and of his owne saluation and wherein no man euer knoweth whither he receiueth the true sacrament or not ergo 8 All true religion is wise as he that is the author thereof Poperie is not wise but most foolish and ridiculous grossely worshipping many homely relikes absurdly baptizing bells and Churches c. and without all wit and reason much more without diuinitie citing condemning and excommunicating them that are dead ergo 9 All true religion is vnsauorie and vnpleasant to the nature of man But poperie is most pleasant thereunto because it teacheth men not to take any paines in the scriptures yea forbiddeth all such paines because it affirmeth that the worke done is sufficient howsoeuer it be done and that therefore men neede not to be carefull about their hearts because also it commendeth especially the commandements of men giuing all libertie vnto men from the commaundements of God and teaching that what good soeuer is neglected or what euill soeuer is by any committed yet by confession of all this with the mouth by a little voluntarie afflicting of the bodie and especially by a peece of money a man may haue forgiuenes of all ergo The contrarie of all the former arguments is prooued of our religion from whence it follovveth that it is true and acceptable vnto God 10 Both the former conclusions the one against poperie the other for our religion are prooued by actuall testimonies of God These are shewed to be 1 The gifts of God promised to the latter times for the commendation of the Gospel 2 The works of God The gifts of God are shewed to haue beene 1 Excedingly decaied and almost dead and buried in the chiefe times of poperie 2 Repaired reuiued raised vp and greatly to haue flourished c. at the breaking forth of our religion out of the darknes of poperie The works of Godare either single against poperie against our religion or mixt both against poperie and for our religion All these former arguments beeing plentifully handled then followeth the conclusion wherein are exemplified the manifold vse of the whole treatise Concerning them which are of our religion all generally vveake and strong more particularly great persons and those also either generally all or specially Dauids Worthies not ofour religion Atheists and all of no religion Papists 1 weake erring onely of ignorance 2 obstinate and wilfull A GENERAL TREATISE AGAINST POPERIE AND IN DEFENCE OF the religion by publike authoritie professed in England and in other Churches reformed THE PREFACE IT cannot be denied but that many excellent learned and godly men haue both plentifully and soundly and also profitably and fruitfully written most worthie treatises for confutation of all particular points of poperie and like wise for confirmation of all particular points of our religion In this
heare the Scriptures search the Scriptures meditate the Scriptures and pray vnto God for the true vnderstanding of the Scriptures the more also do men mislike of poperie and grow into loue of our religion The Papistes themselues see this to be so and can not denie it therefore doe they by all meanes they can not onely accuse the Scriptures of such difficultie obscuritie as whereby they discourage the vnlearned sort from reading of them but also they vtterly denie them to the common people in their vulgar tongue On the contrarie they care not how common their vnwritten verities be If they feared not the ouerthrow of their religion and the growing of ours by the vse of the Scriptures why should they so streightly restraine the common people from it if they thought as they speake and write that their vnwritten verities were of God aswell as the Scriptures why should they make thē more common then the Scriptures Is it because they thinke them more easie and therefore fitter for the capacitie of the common people then the Scriptures This will not stand with that which they make the ground of them and which they pretend for their speciall warranr namely with the wordes of our Sauiour to his disciples Other thinges haue I to say vnto you but yee cannot beare them now c. Iohn 16. 12. For by these wordes it is manifest that those things which Christ had further to say vnto his disciples were harder thē those that then he did speake are now writtē otherwise he would not haue added as a reason why he did for a time conceale them but yee can not beare them now 5 Now to finish this point forasmuch as that religion which God accepteth and liketh of is wrought by the preaching of his owne word forasmuch as Poperie hath not such beginning but is onely engendred by the slyme of traditions and doctrines of men Finally forasmuch as the religion now publikelie professed in England is both begotten by that immortall seede and doth also grow to further perfection by that pure milke of the word of God therefore I conclude for my first argument that poperie is onely such as those slimie traditions doctrines are whereof it is ingēdred and that our religion is not of man but of God and acceptable vnto God THE SECOND ARGVMENT TOVCHING THE PRE seruing and maintayning of true religion THE same is also manifest by the second meanes whereby poperie hath bine from time to time and yet is vpholden and mainteined For as touching this what shall we say of the impudencie of the Papistes I meane such as account themselues the learned Papistes both in falsifying the auncient Fathers also in alleadging patches onely of their writinges as making against vs but leauing out some part of the same sentēces or some sentence going before or following after whereby both that Father his minde is made euident and also our doctrine approoued Is not this to deale with the Fathers as the deuill doth with the Scripture against our Sauiour Mat. 4. 6. And that the Papists doe thus abuse the readers by citing the Fathers in such sort is sufficiently shewed by those that haue written in particular controuersies To proue the APOCRYPHA bookes Canonicall Scriptures they alleadge the testimonie of Augustin lib. 2. de doctrina Christiana cap. 8. Yet that Augustin did not so vnderstand the word Canonicall as they applie his testimonie is manifest in the same place let the learned reader see Whitak Controuers 1. quest 1. Cap. 4. Pag. 15. In like manner they deale with Ambrose whose testimonie they alleadge for proofe of this that manie things are hard in the Scriptures thereby indeed to discourage all vnlearned from reading of the Scriptures as though all things were hard in them and yet in the verie same place Ambrose also saith that in the Scriptures is matter fitt for all persons to drinke first second and last where by he also teacheth that as there are some things to be drunke last in the riuers of the Scriptures that is not till men be well grounded in knowledge and iudgement so also there is for yong beginners such as haue not entred or that haue made but litle entrance So they deale with Augustin oftentimes in the same question of the perspicuity of the Scripture as also the learned reader may see Whitak quest 4. pag. 276. In like manner they deale with the Fathers almost in all other questions and controuersies Sometime also they alleadge the testimonies of the Fathers out of some of their books not regarding how they haue either opened their minde or retracted their former errors in other of their bookes Sometime againe they pleade the authoritie of some Fathers in citing testimonies of their bookes which they wrote after that they were fallen into some heresie So they alleadge the testimonie of Tertullian out of such workes as he made after that he was a Montanist Whitaker quest 6. pag. 449. Finallie oftentimes they are not ashamed to name the Fathers in particular questions as if they were on their side whereas the cleane contrarie is manifestlie prooued and shewed by our writers and is likewise euident to them that are acquainted with the writings of the Fathers For proofe hereof let the reader looke their preface to the translation of the new testament into English by thēselues and likewise reade M. Fulke his aunswer to the same 2 For their first reason why they translate the new Testament according to the vulgar latine translation and not according to the greeke originall is this It is so auncient say they that it was vsed in the Church of God aboue 1300. yeares agoe as appeareth by the Fathers of those times But M. Fulke sheweth first that no one translation was in those daies commonly rèceiued Secondly by many examples that Tertullian Cyprian the Clergie it selfe of Rome in Cyprian his time Hierome Arnobius Hilarie and Ambrose did not followe this vulgar translation but did reade the text farre diuersly from the same In their fourth reason they commend it as that which for the most part euer since Hierom his time hath beene vsed in the Churches seruice expounded in Sermons alleadged and interpreted in the Commentaries and writings of auncient fathers of the latine Church But M. Fulk prooueth and sheweth First that their Church seruice is not so auncient as Augustine his time many of their Church lessons beeing taken out of Beda and other writers liuing many hundred yeares after Saint Augustine his age Secondly that such parts of the Scripture as seeme to haue beene of most auncient times vsed in the church of Rome are not taken out of their vulgar text and thirdly that since Ierome his time Optatus Melevitanus Fuigentius Primasius Prosper Aquitanicus and Leo likewise himselfe Bishop of Rome did alleadge and interpret the texts of Scripture much differing from this vulgar translation 3 The like may be said of their belying the Fathers in their
in a traunce wherein shee did straungly alter her coūtenance with the other partes of her bodie and spake manie things in commendation of Idolatrie pilgrimage and other like points of popery and likewise in derogation of the Gospell in disallowance of King Henrie his diuorce from the Ladie Katherine the late wife of his elder brother Prince Arthur threatning as it were by way of prophecying that if he proceeded therein he should not be king one moneth after This knauerie beeing found out both shee and her abettors namely certen Munks Fryers Priests were executed for it See the booke of Martyres printed 1583. p. 1054. And other histories thereof The like is reported in the same booke p. 1291. out of the ninth booke of Sleydan his commentaries of certaine fryers of Orleance in Fraunce who because the Maiors wife of the citie vpon her death bed had desired her husband that shee might be buried without the solemnities then commonlie vsed at the funeralls of such persons whereby their noses were wiped of a great part of their accustomed gaine caused a boye in the time of their night seruice to make a straunge noyse in one of the vaults of the church where shee was buried as if he had been a spirit This boyish spirit or spirituall boye thus inspired by the deuill and the fryers and coniured like wise after their popish and deuelish manner hauing signified that he was a dumb spirit by signes also shewed that he was the soule of the said Maiors wife before buried now condemned in hell for the heresie of Martin Luther This frierlie prancke being found out the fryers by authority of the King were committed to prison where they continued a long time before they were released Let the reader see this more largelie in the booke of Martirs Sleidan his commentaries As these and such like meanes continuallie applied to shore vp popery do shew the rottēnes thereof so our religion continuing and standing right notwithstanding manie stormes and tempests against it doth shew it selfe to be sound and vpholden by him onely whose power none is able to resist But of this more shall be spoken afterward vpon other occasion THE THIRD ARGVMENT TOVCHING THE SVB iect matter of true religion AS these meanes hitherto spoken of doe mightelie speake against poperie and teach the verie simplest that are that it is not of God so also doth the matter substāce of popery speake as much For it is partly directlie contratie vnto and partlie farre differing from the matter and substance of that religion which God himselfe hath commended in his Scriptures and the which no mā can denie to be acceptable vnto god This is manifest first of all because that religion which the Scriptures commend is true knowledge of God of Christ Iesus of the truth The Lord saith by the Prophet Ose I desire mercie and not sacrifice and the knowledge of god more then burnt offrings Ose 6. 6. Oftentimes also the Lord reproueth and complaineth of the ignorance want of knowledge in his people as the cause of all euills both which they committed also which came vpō them as Ier. 9. 3. and in many other places S. Peter also saith in the name of all the Apostles We beleeue and know that thou art the Christ the Sonne of the liuing God Ioh. 6. 69. Our Sauiour Christ saith This is life eternall that they knovve thee to be the onely very God and him whome thou hast sent Jesus Christ Ioh. 17. 3. He like wise promiseth the knowledge of the truth to all his true disciples Ioh. 8. 32. The Apostle saith God will haue all men to be saued and come to the knowledge of the truth 1. Tim. 2. 4. And againe he describeth faith to be the knowledge of the truth according to godlines Tit. 1. 1. He forbiddeth also the Corinthians not to be children in vnderstanding 1. Cor. 14. 20. The Ephesians also not to be vnwise but to vnderstand what the will of the Lord is Eph. 5. 17. Finally the Apostle S. Peter biddeth the Christians to whome he wrote to ioyne vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge 2. Pet. 1. 5. By these and many other the like places we see that the Scriptures commend knowledge as the first matter of faith and religion We see also what knowledge they doe commend namely of God of Christ of the truth according to godlines of the will of God of the Scriptures themselues and that to all sorts of men Now what shall we saie is the matter of Poperie Truly to speake according to the nature of things poperie hath indeede no matter at all but is a meere vacuitie or emptines for the most part For may it be saide that poperie is knowledge and that of these things No certenly but it is a principle of poperie that ignorance is the mother of deuotion Therefore the whole popish Church generally condemneth all knowledge of God and of the scriptures in the common people prohibiting them the vse of any part of the scriptures as we haue heard before and teaching and commaunding them onely to beleeue as the Church beleeueth This they saie is sufficient faith and sufficient religion And indeede touching deuotion to their religion they speake most truly For no man will haue any deuotion vnto it that knowerh ought of God in the scriptures But to beleeue as the Church that is as their Church beleeueth is neither true faith nor the shadow of true faith but rather of faith in the deuills The most part also of them when they teach this faith haue it not but can onely say that they haue it and that they doe beleeue as the Church beleeueth The most I saie doe onely saie that they doe so beleeue They doe not in deede beleeue as the Church beleeueth For how can they sith they knowe not what the Church beleeueth Yet are their bare words taken allowed for currant good lawfull faith of Rome I graunt with griefe that many amongst vs know not the principles of our religion yet no man alloweth such ignorance but euery godly man condemneth it and is grieued for it But be it that they did in deede beleeue as their Romish Church beleeueth and that they knew as much as the best Doctour and all their Romish Doctours know touching their religion yet this is not ynough For now to enter into the particular matter of their religiō First the Scripture teacheth vs oftētimes that there is but one God one Lord one Mediatour betweene God man Christ Iesus but poperie teacheth that there are many gods many mediatours For doth it not cōmunicate the peculiar properties of God the vbiquitie or vniuersall presence and such like vnto the body of Christ and doe they not so make an other god thereof doe they not attribute the doing thereof to seuerall saints for seuerall countries diseases and other seuerall affaires which is onely proper to God whereby they make so many seuerall
also to our profession yet doth not our religion maintaine and allow them in their sinnes but contrarily it condemneth such hypocrites and teacheth that their iudgement in the latter daie shall be greater then the iudgement of Papists and the heathen themselues for the same sinnes But as for the like amongst O ye you Papists you religion it selfe and the head and pillars of your Church doe allow approoue and iustifie them yea also commend some of these manifest transgressions of God his laws as excellent vertues and such as whereby the transgressours shall merit heauen THE SEAVENTH ARGVMENT touching one necessarie effect or fruit of true religion which is true ioy and sound comfort of heart I Might adde many other effects and fruits of poperie whereby more plentifully to prooue it not to be of God but because I haue written much alreadie and yet haue diuers other arguments of as good moment as the former remaining I will adde one fruit more or at the least one fruit which that religion that is commended in the Scriptures doth alwaies bring forth but beeing not to be found vpon the whole tree of poperie doth therefore prooue the same neuer to be planted or grafted by the Lord. This fruit is the great ioy and sound comfort of conscience that alwaies groweth vpon the religion commended in the scriptures The statutes of the Lord saith Dauid are right and reioyce the heart Psal 19. 8. They are also sweeter then honie or the honie combe v. 10. He saith also that the promise of God had beene his comfort in his trouble and had quickned him psal 119. 50. and that he remembred the ancient iudgements of God and so was comforted v. 52. and againe v. 92. that except the law of God had beene his delight he should haue perished in his affliction S. Peter also ioyneth these two religions together beleeuing in him whome we see not and reioycing with ioy vnspeakable and glorious 1. Pet. 1. 8. And indeede how can this religion be without such ioy and comfort For it teacheth that the sinnes of such as doe beleeue according to the scriptures are forgiuen Matth. 9. 2. that they are iustified and haue peace with God Rom. 5. 1. that they shall neuer be cast awaie Joh. 6. 37. but raised vp at the latter daie v. 44. that they are in the hands of Christ and that no man shall take them out but that they shall certenly haue eternall life Ioh. 10. 28. which eternal life is kept for them in heauen as likewise they are kept for it in earth not by men or angels but by the mightie power of God 1. Pet. 1 4 and 5. that they are translated from death to life 1. Ioh. 3. 14. and are of the truth and doe as certenly know themselues to be of the truth and that therfore they shall before him assure their hearts as God himselfe greater then their hearts knoweth all things v. 19 and 20. that they are borne of God 1. Ioh. 4. 7. and therefore are the children of God and heyres of God and coheyres with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and that nothing shall separate them from the loue of God v. 38. that they are so built vpon a rocke that no stormes or tempests shall ouerthrow them Math. 7. 25. but stand fast for euer like vnto mount Zion psal 125. 1. that they may no more doubt that God will forget the worke and labour of their loue then they may doubt of the righteousnesse of God himselfe Heb. 6. 10. not in respect of their works but in respect of his promise 1. Ioh. 2. 25. and the price wherewith they are bought by Christ Iesus 1. Cor. 7. 23. and 1. Pet. 1. 9. and of the earnest of their inheritance euen the spirit Eph. 1. 14. and of the continuall intercession of Christ for them at the right hand of God his father Rom. 8. 34. These and such like things doth the Scripture assure all them of that by the fruits of a true faith and religion both inward and outward know that they haue true faith and religion How therefore can they be heauie yea how can they not reioyce with ioy vnspeakable and glorious 2 But what ioy and comfort can there be in poperie doth not poperie denie the first foundation of sound comfort namely the doctrine of particular election whereby a man is taught that God loued him and predestinated him to eternall saluation before the world was made doth not poperie take awaie the word of God that giueth wisdome to the simple sight to the blinde light to them that sit in darknes and life to them that are dead in their sinnes and doth it not therefore leaue men foolish and blinde in darknes and in death it selfe Can there be any comfort in such an estate Doth not poperie teach that saluation is to be had partly yea chiefely by our owne works and merits And who knoweth when he hath wrought and merited enough Doth not poperie teach that the efficacie of the sacrament dependeth vpon the intention of the priest Who knoweth the intention of any man his heart but his owne 1. Cor. 2. 11. who therefore knoweth when he receiueth the sacrament and when he doth not Doth not poperie teach that it is presumption for any man to saie that he is certen and sure of the fauour of God and his continuance therein and of his saluation What sound and certen comfort can there be without assurance of these things 3 I graunt that the Papists reioyce and are merrie as other wicked men reioyce and are merrie But such ioy is fleshly superficiall and vncertaine the ground thereof beeing not in God but in themselues in Saints in reliques of Saints in the bloode of Martyrs in the pardon and indulgences of the Pope and such like sandie stuffe and therefore not certaine The ioy of the Papists is like the ioy of the Israelites at the making and worshipping of the calfe Exod. 32. 6 17 18 and 19. The ioye of the Papists is the ioye of Nabal in his great feast 1. Sam. 25. 36. The ioye of the Papists is like the ioye of Belshazzar when he made the great feast to a thousand of his Princes and dranke wine before the thousand commaunding the holy vessells of the Temple of the Lord to be brought forth vnto that feast and polluting them at his pleasure Dan. 5. 1. Euen such I saie and no other is the ioye of the Papists before their Calfe that is before their innumerable idols and grauen images and at their solemne feastes which they dedicate to the honour and worshippe of them and of their Saints 4 Contrariwise our religion teacheth all these thinges which before wee heard to be taught in the Scriptures it teacheth men to applie them to themselues and by them to assure themselues of God his loue and fauour as certenly as if the angel Gabriel were sent to thē as he was to the Virgin Marie euen to speake to them
will any earthly Prince sende forth his onely daughter or let his wife goe abroad without such princely ornaments as her princely estate requireth and whereby she may be knowne and reuerenced with the reuerence of a Prince much lesse therefore may we dreame that the Lord God of heauen the Prince of all princes would so rawly send forth his onely daughter or Christ Iesus his onely sonne and heyre suffer his onely spouse whome he loueth as himselfe so poore and naked as the Church of Rome was in her highest prosperitie 12 I graunt that the Pope and his Cardinals had their rich ornaments and costly apparell of siluer gold pretious stones c. that also the rest of that generation euen to the very hedge priest had a gaie coate to weare in their holy busines that likewise all their Churches had great riches I graunt that in all these things the Pope and poperie did farre excell Saint Peter with all the rest of the Apostles and likewise all the churches of their time but these are not the spirituall ornaments that the spirituall nature of the daughter of God and spouse of Christ requireth The Church of God is indeede described psal 45. 9. c. as a Queene standing at the right hand of her husband Christ Iesus in a vesture of gold of Ophir and as hauing apparel of broidered gold and likewise that shee hath rayment of needle-worke but the Prophet describeth here the Church onely after the manner of an earthly Queene meaning notwithstanding by these things all manner of spirituall and heauenly ornaments and therefore euen in the same place and the beginning of the 13. verse shee is said to be all glorious within It is therefore certen that the chiefe ornaments of the Church are inward and spirituall the which wanting whatsoeuer outward ornaments and riches shee hath yet shee may be called wretched miserable poore blinde naked as Christ Iesus calleth the church of the Laodiceans Rev. 3. 17. 13 Now then forasmuch as the Church of Rome wanted those spirituall ornaments which the Lord hath promised and doth alwaies bestowe vpon his daughter I conclude therefore that shee is not the daughter of God neither the spouse of Christ If it be said that the true church hath not alwaies the like gifts I freely acknowledge it yet this is certen that the more the Church flourisheth the richer shee is in the gifts of God his spirite But contrariwise the more the Church of Rome flourished the poorer shee was in the graces of God his spirit And here by the flourishing of the Church I meane not onely an outwarde flourishing in earthly things for so I graunt that as the graces of God are many times choaked in particular member● of the Church by outward prosperitie so it may be also in the whole bodie of the visible church but by the flourishing of the church I meane her flourishing in sound doctrine and her enioying of such authoritie as of right belongeth vnto her Now in this sense when the doctrine which the church of Rome accounteth onely sound doctrine and the contrarie whereof shee accounteth heresie when I saie this Romish doctrine most flourished with least gaine saying of any thereunto when also that authoritie which the church of Rome chalengeth to her selfe as her right was in such regard that neither Princes nor people made any resistance thē were those gifts of the holy Ghost promised to the true Church in the latter times most rare and scarse when it was sommer with the church of Rome touching all her prerogatiues which shee chalengeth then it was the dead of winter touching those graces of God his spirit so that scarse any leaues of them did hang vpon any tree Thus we see that those promises were not performed to the church of Rome in that estate wherein now it standeth and whereof it vaunteth THE SECOND BRANCH OF the tenth argument touching the reuiuing of Gods gifts at the breaking forth of our religion out of the darknes of Poperie MAy the like be saide of our Churches in England Scotland c. sithence the religion now established brake forth of that darknes wherein before it laie No ve●ily All the worlde seeth what knowledge of arts of tongues of philosophie and all humanitie hath beene yet is and doth daily encrease Now many children sixteene or seauenteene yeares old are better Grecians and more learned Hebritians then were the great doctours in the height of poperie Now I may truly saie that Cambridge alone or Oxenford alone if not some one Colledge in either of both hath more skilfull Grecians and learned Hebritians then all Christendome had whilst poperie sate vpon the th●one The like may be said of the true knowledge of the Latin Philosophie also and all arts since our religion haue beene reuiued haue beene much polished and farre more perfected then they were before 2 Let it not here be said that there are some Papists now euery waie in these things as learned as the Protestants For first of all the question is not whether Papists or Protestants be nowe more learned in the tongues or liberall sciences but when this learning hauing beene along time as it were banished out of the world returned againe This present learning therefore of the Papists neither much helpeth them neither a whitte weakneth this mine argument except they could prooue that when their religion was at the highest then also they had bin as learned as now they are Secondly although that many of them haue indeede now attained vnto much knowledge of arts and tongues yet this knowledge begā first to be reuiued amongst vs. Afterward they seeing vs by those gifts tha● God had bestowed vpon vs for commending of our religion to the world to be so able to maintaine our doctrine and so mightie to oppugne theirs they I saie seeing this were prouoked and whetted to take the more paines in studie that they might the better defend their errours against vs which now they saw to be falling to the earth from whence they sprung Many also of the learned amongst them attained vnto their learning euen against vs and by vs beeing brought vp in our schooles and afterward better nourished and more strengthened in our Vniuersities But as vnnaturall children doe sometime forsake their naturall parents and runne they cannot tell whether so haue they forsaken our Vniuersities and as many roagish boies beeing entertained by some master and vnder him hauing learned some good trade doe oftentimes when they haue been a while there forsake such masters and goe to any other that will giue them but a little more wages yearely vnthankfully forgetting all that their former masters did for them when no man els would regard or pitie them euen so many Papists hauing gotten their learning amongst vs and in our Vniuersities yet seeing afterward they can not haue such outward preferrements as they looked for which is a thing that they especially ●●yme at haue vnnaturally
forsaken vs and associated themselues with the Papists who wan●ing such studdes to vphold their rotten and tot●ering religion haue beene glad to entertaine them with great promises but many times not performing them but rather bringing them or sending them at the least to the gallowes Such oftentimes is the iudgement of God vpon them ●hat too much respect outward preferrements and so doth God in his iustice harden many of them that will not beleeue his truth whilst they liue where and when they may haue it that he giueth them ouer to beleeue lies so strongly that they care not what danger they incurre against themselues both soule and bodie for defence and furthering of those lyes which they haue embraced 2. Thess 2. 11 12. 3 Well to returne from where we haue di●ressed we see by this that I haue now spoken that in these respects thus mentioned the Church of Rome may thanke vs for that learning which nowe they haue and for many of those learned men which are now in great and ●igh estimation amongst them Further it is no new thing that those gifts of Gods spirit which God at the first giueth to beare witnes vnto 〈◊〉 truth should be afterward communicated bo●● to such as doe not greatly fauour Christ and his gospel and also to such as are wicked and reprobate In the time of Christ himselfe the power of casting out diuells first giuen to the twel●● Apostles Math. 10. 1. for the commendation 〈◊〉 their ministerie was afterward communicated to other that would not ioyne with the Apostles nor follow Christ Our Sauiour also saith that many that should plead for themselues the casting of diuells out of other should notwithstanding be reiected by him as refuse persons Math. 7. 22. And thus hath the Lord dealt in these latter times As at the first preaching of the gospel by the Apostles after the ascension of Christ he bestowed vpon them the gift of tongues for the better magnifying of the gospell and furnished them likewise with other extraordinarie gifts which gifts notwithstanding afterward were also communicated vnto many other yea to many of the wicked so in these latter times also at the first breaking forth of his truth which we professe through the blacke the thicke and darke cloudes of poperie that ● long time had ouershadowed and drouped the whole earth the Lord according to his ancient promises gaue gifts vnto men in respect of the former great want of them very extraordinarie● these gifts I say he gaue at the first breaking forth of our religion through poperie to the first preachers of our religion for the commending thereof vnto the world and so encreased them afterwarde more and more in those that embraced our religion but after that by such gifts he had sufficiently renewed and recouered the credite of his truth which we doe now hold and likewise by beautifying our religion with the first fruits of these gifts had sufficiently disgraced poperie then he communicated these gifts vnto other euen vnto the Papists themselues 4 And truly in verie great wisdom hath God done so that he might teach men to esteeme of his truth not for those gifts onely but also for the truths sake it selfe So also he would haue the Papists themselues yea and all the world to see that all the learning in the world is not able to vphold poperie and that our religion is as well able to stand against and to beat downe poperie into the pitte of hell from whence it came as well when poperie hath the same armour on that our religion hath as when it was naked and had almost none at all Therefore to conclude this part also of this my last argument touching the performance of those promises of God to the Church that were neuer in such manner performed to the Church of Rome As the more the darke cloudes of poperie couered the whole earth and the more violently also the boisterous winds therof did blow vpon the earth making the very cedars of Lebanō both to bēd and to breake the more dead were all the gifts of the spirit as we see all things to be in the depth of winter so like wise sithence our religion hath come about towards the sommer point and by the strength and power thereof hath scattered and dispersed these cloudes and pacified those boisterous winds of popery in many kingdomes the more haue those gifts of God his spirit before promised budded and flourished euen as we see after an hard winter the more the sunne commeth about toward Cancer the more all trees and hearbs before seare and dead doe reuiue and spring out I conclude therefore that as by the springing and flourishing of hearbs and other plants we know sommer to be come so also by these gifts of God his spirit which haue sprung and flourished euen sithence that our religion hath beene reuiued againe quickned we know the same gospell to be againe returned about the which in former times God according to the righteousnesse of his promise did beautifie and commēd with the like graces 5 Will any Papist now obiect the times of Tertullian Gregorie Nazianzen Cyprian Chrysostome Ambrose Ierome Augustine Barnard and such like let him first remember that most of them were before the time whereof we spake They were I say before any stone almost laide of the foundation of the church of Rome in that state wherein now it is all of them also liued before that Church was built to that perfection whereunto it was reared vntill the repairing of our religion Againe these auncient Fathers so many of them as did see the building of this church begun or any matter prepared ●owards the same laboured by might maine as we speake and to the vtmost of their power ●he hindring and staying thereof therefore haue they plainly written against images iustification by works inuocation of Saints freewill and many other the like principles of poperie as is ●lentifully shewed by our late writers in parti●ular controuersies Especially both they and also many other yea some of the Papists them●elues and of the learnedst of them haue migh●ly declaimed and sharply inuaied against all ●uch proud and arrogant titles as now the Pope ●laimeth and vsurpeth Further although these ●ere excellent persons for learning and godli●es and worthie of honourable remembrance ●● all ages yet liued they not altogether Nay ●●ther one age had almost but one such or at the ●ast but verie fewe such as these were that I ●●ue named but our ages and the ages before ●s euer sithence the returne of our religion haue 〈◊〉 all times and in euerie kingdome had many ●●ch Yea I doubt not to sale and that truly that although it be not yet two hundred yeares since ●u● religion came out into the open field and ●ncountered with poperie in such publique ●anner as now it doth yet there haue beene in ●is little time as many great learned men as ●●ptaines of the Lord on our
thanks to God shee said to the deuill enarra mihi naturam tuam Tell me thy nature The deuill saide Take away thy foote from the crowne of my head that I may tell thee This beeing done the deuill saide I am as one of them whome Salomon shut vp in a brasen Salomon a coniurer Diuels may be locked vp in vessels vessell and when the Babylonians came they thought that it had beene full of golde and brake it open and by this meanes we flew out and euer sithence we haue laid snares for the iust After these and many other things the virgin said vnto him Auoide O tempter Sathan Then the earth opened her mouth and receiued him 4 In the seauenth and eight lesson next An other tale of the said Margaret following is added this historie of the saide virgin Margaret The gouernour Olymbrius hauing grieuously tormented her commanded her to be bound hand and foote and put into a great vessell of water The virgin praied that that water might be made a fountaine of baptisme vnto eternall life Then was a great earthquake and a do●e came from heauen and set a crowne of gold vpon her head By this sight fiue thousand men were conuerted besides women and children all which by the commandement of Olymbrius were beheaded and he seeing her constancie commanded her in like māner to be put to death Beeing brought forth therefore to the place of execution shee desired the hangman to giue her leaue to praie This graunted and her praier made that euery one that should write her sufferings or reade it or heare it or make mention of it might merit pardon of This maketh well for me that write this historie so also for all them that shall read it c. his sinnes c. This praier I say made to this effect and more largely there were great thunders and a doue came from heauen saying Blessed art thou O spouse of Christ Margaret behold Christ hath graunted all thy petitions come therefore into the rest of thy heauenly coūtrey Then shee lifting vp her selfe badde the hangman execute his masters commaundement But he saide God forbid that I should kill thee Shee answered if thou doest it not thou canst haue no part with me Then he trembling cut off her head and falling at the feete of the virgin he gaue vp the ghost 5 Many other like fabulous things are reported in the same booke of other the like saints as of Saint Osmond Saint Kenelme the King of the seauen sleepers of whome they The 7. sleepers read likewise for a lesson in the church that they fleeing persequution and laying them downe in a caue to sleepe continued there sleeping 362. yeares Likewise of Saint Oswald the king of Saint Laurence Saint Dionis and his fellows Saint Edward the king of Saint Wenefred the virgin of these I saie and many other the like saints many fabulous things are there reported which I might here haue added but hauing beene long alreadie in these seruice bookes I dare not presume further vpon he patience of the reader For this cause also I forbeare further addition of many most foule and blasphemous prayers in the feast of the exaltation of the crosse the rather also because I haue noted the like before 6 Nowe it may be some will here obiect against these things thus gathered out of their seruice bookes that albeit it be most true indeede that sometimes there haue beene such praiers and such pardons annexed vnto them yet now the church of Rome hath vtterly disclaimed and reuoked them and likewise reformed such bookes as now especially they vse To this I answer first that if there be any such reuocation and reformation of the foresaide ridiculous toyes and horrible blasphemies because they were ridiculous and blasphemous then thereby it is graunted that the time hath beene when the Church of Rome was a foolish and blasphemous Church and their religion likewise foolish and blasphemous For otherwise what needed they to haue reuoked such things or to haue made any reformation of them Secondly I demand where this reuocation and reformation is They wil perhaps wonder at this demaund sith I my selfe haue before named their late booke intituled officium beatae Mariae virginis nuper reformatum pij quinti pontificis maximi iuss●● editum that is the seruice of blessed Marie the virgin lately reformed and by the commandement of Pius the fift high priest published They will perhaps referre me to this booke it selfe as pretended to be reformed and especially to the preface thereunto prefixed by the said pepe Pius wherein is a kinde of reuocation of some former seruices of the virgin 7 Touching the booke it selfe I doe onely repeat my answer before made namely that this booke is but onely said and pretended to be reformed and not reformed in truth at the least of the substantiall points most to be regarded This is manifest by such ridiculous blasphemous praiers as I haue before noted out of the same booke still remaining therein Therefore in setting this title before the booke The seruice of the Virgin lately reformed they doe but as many a false taylour doth with the garment which he hath marred in making and as some careles cooks with the meate which they serue vnto their masters table not throughly rosted or boiled As the taylour beeing blamed for the fault of the garment promiseth to mende it taking it home with him bringeth it againe facing out the owner that he hath mended it when he neuer did any thing more vnto it then at the first at least to any purpose and as the cooke beeing rebuked for his negligence oftentimes notwithstanding sendeth in the meat the second time as better rosted or boiled when either he neuer did put it againe on the spit or into the pot or if he did that yet it had neuer a turne more nor any more seething euen so the church of Rome being iustly blamed for the grosse and foule blottes of their former seruice bookes haue taken it againe into their shoppe or kitchin but yet returned it vnto vs or rather vnto their mistris and ladie onely giuing this word reformatum reformed that is facing vs or rather their mistris and ladie omnia esse bene that is that all things are well when in truth the chiefe and most principall absurdities and blasphemies doe yet remaine 8 Concerning the preface vnto the former booke so pretended to be reformed I graunt that therein seemeth to be a kinde of reuocation or disanulling of some former seruice The auncient popish seruice bookes before mentioned are not now disanulled or reuoked by the church of Rome bookes but not of such seruice bookes as out of which I haue gathered the things before set downe For in the same preface after the reuocation and disanulling of their former seruice bookes which it doth reuoke and disanull followeth a very large exception of three branches the first is