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A68128 An ansvver to Pope Vrban his inurbanity, expressed in a breue sent to Lowis the French King, exasperating him against the Protestants in France. / VVritten in Latine by the Right Reverend Father in God, Ioseph Lord Bishop of Exeter. ; Translated into English by B.S.; Inurbanitati pontificiae responsio Jos. Exoniensis. Hall, Joseph, 1574-1656.; Urban VIII, Pope, 1568-1644. 1629 (1629) STC 12641; ESTC S103615 12,206 46

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the tabernacles of the righteous let the vvicked see this and fret and let the Synagogue of Satan consume avvay The most Christian King fighteth for Religion the Lord of hosts fighteth for the King We verilie in this Mother Cittie of the vvorld triumph vvith holie ioy vve congratulate this your Maiesties victorie the trophies vvhereof are erected in heauen the glorie vvhereof the generation that is to come shall neuer cease to speak of Novv at the length this age hath seene the Tovvre of Rochell no losse impregnable by the obstinacie of treacherie then strength of nature surrendered to the King and St. Peter Neither is any so foolish as to ascribe this glorious victorie rather to happinesse then to vertue By your long siege of many months you haue taught vs that Europe oweth your French Legions no lesse commendation for their constancy then for their expedition your armie going cleere away with the victorie over your enemies by slighting all dangers induring all hardnesse devoteth their life vnto you promise you an absolute triumph of conquered heresy The waters of the Ocean made a noise and were troubled fighting for the besieged Rebels they made choise of death rather then a surrender vndermining treacherie approached even to your Maiesties tents hell all opened her mouth vomiting out troupes of mischiefes and dangers to the end so rich a fort might not be taken away from their Impietie The Lord stood on thy right hand thou hast not onelie ouercome the forces of thine enemies but thou wart able also to put a bridle vpon the Ocean aiding them Let vs all giue thanks to Almightie God who hath deliuered thee from the contradictions of the vnbeleeving people How beie sith you are not ignorant with vvhat care the fruits of victories ought to be preserued left they perish there is none can doubt but that in a short time all the remainder of the hereticks that haue got stable roome in the French Vineyard shall by you be vtterlie discomfited The Church desireth that this Diademe of perfect renowne be put vpon that helmet of salvation wherewith the Lord mightie in battell seemeth to cover the head of your Majestie for we belieue shortly that all tumults being appeased in France the glistering Ensigne of Lewis the Conquerour shall shine to the Captiue daughter of Sion rehearsing the French Trophies and beholding the brightnesse of your lightning lance God who performeth the desire of them that feare him prosper our desires and the prayers of the Catholick Church Our Nuntio vvho was an eye-witnesse of your Princelie glorie in your tents will be a faithfull Interpreter of our Pontificall gratulation to your Majestie on whom we most lovingly bestow our Apostolicall benediction Given at Rome at S. Mary the greater vnder the seale of the Fisher the eight and twentieth day of November in the yeare of our Lord 1628. and the sixt year of our Pontificate INVRBANITATI PONTIFICIAE RESPONSIO IOS EXONIENSIS AMICO MIHI PLVRIMVM COLENDO Do. GILBERTO PRIMEROSIO S. THEO L. PROFESsori Ecclesiae Gallicae Londinensis Pa stori Regiae Mati a sacris MOnstrabat mihi modò Tourvalus noster gente Gallus Epistolam Latino idiomate typis editam Vrbani Papa pro more tumidam sanguinolentam Ludovico Galliarum Regi pridem datam in quâ vbi bonus Pontifex Jo Paean canorè cecmisset Rupellensi victoriae Regi simul ac Genti abundè gratulatus descendit illicò fatis inclementer ad saevum illud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et haereticorum in Gallia stabulantium prostigationem acriter vrg●t impellit Continere manum non potui quin me subitò in chartas darem arripio calamum responsionem non meditor sed effundo quicquid est habe vir venerande et lege vel igni trade vel luci Vale. A tuo IOS EXON VRBANO VIII PONTIFICI ROMANO JOSEPHVS EXONIENSIS sanam mentem et charitatem QVID ni vero Pontificem maximum compellare ausit minimus Episcorum Non peto veniam nec opus est priscâ vtor licentiâ Non ita nimium distabat olim ab Eugubio Roma aut Isca meus à Tiberi Audi modò Pontifex Vrbane quod brevi pro tremendo Christi Lribunali pallidus exaudies Pastorem Christiani gregis parum decent hae sanguineae liturae Tune vt ad arma tristis Praeco conclames Tune vt Christianos Principes nimio-quàm plenos cruoris ad profligationem suorum clademq horrendam acriter instiges Ideone tibi creditae claves vt ferratas belli portas eburneasque Ditis inferni aperires Euge Petri vmbra numquid hi tibi Malchi videntur quibus dum aures praecidere voluisti levi errore in guttura incidisti Aut nunquid de quadrupedibus hisce in Gallia stabulantibus dictum tibi pridem caelitus Occide et Manduca Tune pacifice Rector Ecclesiae vt coruscantes galeas hastas gladios loquaris Qualem verò sonum edere potuisset Lupa tui Romuli si ista Petri caulam non dedeceat truculenta vox Conspue quantum lubet et comminge cineres infaelicis Rupellae et diffla superbo spiritu conculcatissimum miserrimae vrbis pulverem recognosce interim paululùum quàm non multa transierunt saecula ex quo haereditarium Ludovici íam tui sceptrum Romae portas confregerit comminueritmaenia cives dissiparit praecessoremque tuum sannis dirisque onustum caeco carcere mulctârit Sed neque tot deinceps excurrent anni nisi me praesaga futurimens nimiùm fefellerit antequam cecidisse Babylonem et clamabit Angelus et gratulabundus orbis obstupescet Tuae erunt aliquando hae vices vrbium perditissima Faelicem sanè illum qui paria tibi quaeque retulerit quique parvulorum tuorum cap ta saxis identidem illiserit Fruere tu intereà miseriis bisce nostris arride lachrymis exhilararè suspiriis eiulatibus accine applaude cruelatibus est qui de caelo suo profpicit iustus vltor cuius nos vnà et exosculamur virgam et inbismus vindictae Causam tu nostrant age ô Deus imo tuam tuam solius Quid ni te provocet arbitrum audax innocentia Si quid vspiam est in toto hoc sacrosanctae quam profitemur hactenus religionis negotio quod ex humani cerebri impurissimo fonte prodierit pereat sane nobiscum pereat penitissimè et ad inferos suos meritò relegetur Quòd si nos nihil vnquam Christiano orbi propinare ausi nisi quod tu Prophetis tuis Apostolisque inspiraveris perque illos fallere nescios amanuenses populo tuo fidelissimé traditum volueris scilicet quin aut nos tecum fielicissimé erramus ô Deus veritatis aut tu nobiscum aeternam hanc et vnicè Evangelicam religionem tueris Fallimur verò miselli pietas est ilicet quam nos crudelitatis insimulamus zelus est dómus Dei quo bonus Pontifex ita totus accenderis vt haereticorum ad vnum omnium in Gallia stabulantium extirpationem
the doting age of the world in which a certaine new off-spring of Articles haue begun to spring it is capitall to vs and to bee corrected with no lesse punishment then the continuall torments of hell Consider this all ye Christians that liue in any place of the earth how farre is it from all Justice and Piety that a new faith can be created in after time by humane judgement vnheard of in antient ages which may adjudge Posterity to hell for not beleeving that which the first Christians never heard of and yet went to heaven These greene fresh witts of a Politicke Religion are in truth the men which most outragiously perplex the world wherever the name of Christ is heard of These are they who set at variance among themselues the Kings of the earth who otherwise it is like would bee peaceable These rent Kingdomes distract people dissolue societies nourish seditions lay waste the most flourishing Countries and lastly doe bring the richest Cities to ashes and confusion But ought these things thus to be done Doe wee thinke that this will bee found a just cause of deadly warre or of a Massacre at the tribunall of the great Iudge Awake oh ye Christian Princes and thou especially King Lowis into whose eares those mischiefs are so vncivilly cruelly whispered awake at length and see how cursed fiercenesse deviseth to put it selfe vpon your Maiestie after the most mischievous manner vnder a pretence of piety They are your natiue subiects whom these forreiners require for the slaughter yea they are Christs and what would you bath your hand or sword in the blood of those for whom Christ shed his who lavished most freely for you and your great Parent their owne Heare SIR I beseech you whose stile is among your subjects LEVVIS THE IVST If we did worship any other God any other Christ then yours if we aspired to any other heaven if we held any other Creed or Baptisme if in a word wee did make profession of a new Church leaning vpon other foundations there would be cause verily why you shold destinate such hereticks remaining in France to revengefull flames If your people haue violated any thing established by the God of vs all or lawfully appointed by your selfe we verily craue no pardon Let them smart who haue deserved stripes it is just But make not havocke of the servants of your owne God and of your owne subiects whom Religion it selfe makes faithfull vnto you Suffer not for a few yesterdayes and superfluous patches of humane invention and will-worship added to the Christian religion that they perish who haue beene willing to redeeme your and your Fathers safety and renowne vvith the greatest hazard of their owne liues suffer them to liue by you by whom you now raigne But if they were not yours yet remember that they are Christians vvith vvhich title your subiects are vvont superlatiuely to honour you as most Christian and that you are washed in the same Font bought with the same blood and renued by the same Spirit and in a vvord vvhatsoever vaine furie thundereth out to the contrarie they are the Sonnes of the Spouse and the Brothers of the heavenly Bridgegroome But these doe erre from the faith From vvhich faith I pray Not from the Christian but the Romish Novv vvhat a prodigious thing is this Christ condemnes not these yet the Pope doth If your great Chancellor of Paris vvere novv aliue hee vvould freely teach his Sorbôna vvhich of olde he did hovv that the Pope hath not power that I may vse his ovvne vvord to hereticate any Proposition Yea but an vniversall Councel hath condemned thē Which Councell vvas that The Trent I am deceived if that Councell as yet hath beene received and approved in your Dominions Consult vvith your antient Authors of best credit they vvill tell you hovv vniust a Councell it vvas yea hovv it vvas No Councell at all that vvhatsoever vvas done or established by that Company being enthralled to seven-headed Rome vvas but the act of one Bishop Lastly consider I beseech Your Maiestie hovv the Reformed are not in some kinde to the Papists as the Papists are to the Reformed Heresie is alike sharplie vpbraided on both sides But doe vve deale so roughlie vvith the professours of the Romish Religion Did vve ever rage vvith fire and sword against the Papall faith See vvas ever the crime of a conscience miserablie misled accounted capitall It may be You may finde yet verie seldome perchance some impudent Masse-priest a despiser of publick lawes a sower of sedition to haue received his condigne punishment But no Papist I speake confidentlie vvas ever put to death meerelie for the cause of Religion or losse either of head or limbe Why doest not thou then oh sonne of most milde and clement HENRY carrie thy selfe alike tovvard thy faithfull subiects vvho innocentlie professe the reformed religion why doth not Your Maiesty take order that it may be a trap for no man to haue worshipped God according to the Scriptures and the practise of the antient Church and that it may be lawfull for Your subjects to be trulie pious And thou Pope Vrba● at last come to thy selfe and consider how well this cruell sentence becomes thy Purple robes It becomes not him to carrie a sheepe-crooke but a sword that will furrow vp that field Nor is this net belonging to fishing but rather to the fencing schooles of the ancient Romish Gladiators Beautifull are the fee●e of them that preach peace saith the Prophet we may say now of thee farr otherwise Hatefull are the hands of them that preach warre If thou hadst anie portion in the Gospell of Christ thou mightest easilie judge that all things there sound peace gentlenesse meekenesse concord This revenging spirit was not sent but from hell Not the least sound of an hammer is heard in Gods Temple but You good man will haue the holie Church of God filled with the clangor of trumpetts and the clashing of semiters and the groanes of men ready to dye Therefore open thy eare at length ô thou who proudlie scornest the judgements of all mortall men That which heretofore our holie and learned Robert Bishop of Lincolne is reported to haue done to thy Predecessour that doe I now to thee Let it be lawfull for me now to summon thee to the fearefull tribunall of Almightie God to which thy trembling and fearefull Ghost shall shortlie be brought to render accompt of that thy bloody advice In the meane while if thou hast anie care or thought to flie from the vvrath to come and escape eternall vengeance REPENT A BREEVE OF OVR HOLY FATHER THE POPE TO THE KING Vpon the taking of Rochell Printed at Paris in St. James street by Edmond Martin lying at the Golden Sunne 1629. With allowance from authority Pope VRBAN the eight OVR most deare sonne in Christ vve send You greeting and Apostolicall benediction the voice of reioycing and salvation is in
AN ANSWER TO POPE VRBAN HIS INVRBANITY EXPRESSED IN A BREVE SENT TO LOWIS the French King exasperating him against the Protestants in France VVritten in Latine by the Right Reverend Father in God IOSEPH Lord Bishop of EXETER Translated into English by B. S. Pardon the faults this English stile affords A Child interpreted the Fathers words Printed at London by William Jones for Nicolas Bourne at the South Entrance of the Royall Exchange 1629. TO MY MVCH RESPECTED FRIEND MR. DR. PRIMROSE PASTOR OF THE FRENCH CHVRCH in LONDON and Chaplaine to his most excellent Majestie MR. Tourvall a French man shewed me but a while since an Epistle of Pope Vrban delivered of late to Lewis the French King written in a swelling and bloody stile after their manner In which when the good Bishop had cleerely carroled a song of Triumph for the victory over Rochell and had more then sufficiently gratulated both the King and Nation he then most barbarously proceedeth to that harsh and cruell language smite and cast downe and eagerly vrgeth yea inforceth the destruction of all the Hereticks stabling in France Which when I had read I could not forbeare but presently taking pen and paper I did not vtter vpon premeditation but poured out on the sodaine this answere Such as it is receiue Reverend Brother and peruse it and either send it abroad into the light of the world or set on a light fire Farewell From your friend IOS EXON TO POPE VRBANE THE EIGHT BISHOP OF ROME JOSEPH Bishop of EXETER wisheth Sober witts and Christian Charity WHY may not the least Prelate make bolde to reprooue the High Priest I ask no leaue nor is there any need I take the ancient liberty There was not in olde time so much difference betweene Eugubium and Rome nor betweene Exeters Ishe and Tyber Hearken therefore now Pope Vrbane to that which ere long thou shalt heare of with heartlesse feare and trembling at the dreadfull Tribunall of Christ. Those blotts of blood are nothing well suiting a Pastor of the Christian Flocke What maist thou like a dreadfull King of Heralds proclaime warre what meanest thou that so eagerly thou provokest Christian Princes too too full of blood to the extirpating and horrid massacring their owne subjects was it for this that the Keyes were delivered to thy trust that thou mightest open the barrd vp from gates of warre and the Yvory dores of infernall Pluto Alas the shadow of Peter tooke these Protestants of France for Malchus whose eares while he went about to cut off he committed but a light errour and hit them on the throates or perchance it hath beene said to him from heaven of late concerning these Animals stabling in France KILL and EATE What art thou Pilot of the Churches peace and talkest of shining helmets speares and swords What other houling could the She Wolfe the Damme of thy Romulus haue yelled out if this fierce roaring become the folde of Peter Disgorge thy selfe as much as thou wilt and stale vpon the ashes of vnhappy Rochell and scatter with thy blustering breath the most despised dust of that most miserable City yet withall call to minde a little how not many ages past the predecessor of this Lowis though thine owne Lowis now broke open the gates of Rome mouldred the walls dispersed the Citizens and condemned thy predecessour to a dark Dungeon lading him with bitter scoffes and curses Neither shall many years passe againe vnlesse my divining spirit be much mistaken before Babylon fall and the Angell shout and the world congratulate with amazement Rochells case shall be thine owne case ere long thou most forlorne of all Cities Happy he who shall render thee like for like who also shall dash out the braines of thy children against the stones In the meane time fraight thy selfe with our miseries laugh at our teares make merry at our last gaspes sing to our sighes and applaud our vexations There is a iust Avenger who lookes downe from heaven whose rod we kisse and gaspe after his revenge on thee at once Pleade thou our cause nay thy cause ô God J say thine alone Why may not confident innocency appeal to thee her judge If in the whole structure and fabrick of our most holy religion by vs hitherto professed there be any one thing which hath proceeded from the most impure fountain of mans invention let it even perish yea let it vtterly perish and bee banished to their Purgatory But if wee haue not dared to profter any thing to the Christian world except what thou hast inspired to thy Prophets and Apostles and by these thy pen-men which could not deceiue wouldest haue delivered most faithfully to thy people surely then either most happily wee erre with thee ô God of trueth or thou wilt defend with vs this eternall and onely Evangelicall religion But thou wilt say that wee poore wretches are deceived that it is Piety no doubt which we accuse of Cruelty that it is the zeale of the house of God whereby good Bishop thou art so set on fire that thou hast so importunely wished and counselled the rooting out all at once of the heretickes abiding in France O Brazen Brow ô Adamantine heart We call God the Angels and Saints as witnesses of this so hainous reproach For those whom thou falsely brandest with the markes of heresie thou shalt heare at length when the Church shall acknowledge them for her Sonnes and Christ for his Members For what I call God to record doe wee teach which the holy Scriptures the Councils the Fathers the Churches the Christian Chayres haue not with one consent alwayes held For all those points which wee professe the most approoved authors among you doe maintaine them all There are indeede certaine late superstructions and patches of opinions which you would haue superadded to the ancient Faith Those we most religiously reject and do constantly ever refuse them they are humane they are yours Lastly they are either doubtfull or impious And must we therefore being Christian soules needes bee cast out of the lap of the Church Must we forthwith be delivered vp to bee devoured by fire and sword Must we being throwne downe to hell by the thunderbolt of a curse there burne for ever Is this all the matter why the stall and shambles are all the provision your Holinesse makes for such Animals as vs God! see the Papall iustice and mercy This is the meer iniury of time That was not heresie of olde which is so now if we had beene borne in the ancient times of the Church before that Romane primacy Image-worship Transubstantiation the Sacrifice of the Masse Purgatory the private or halfe Communion the selling of Pardons and other like brood of this hatch was knowne to the Christian world heaven lay open truly to vs no lesse then to other godly soules of that more simple age who happily tooke flight from hence in the true falth of Christ. But now that wee haue beene reserved vnto