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A44364 The spirit of the martyrs revived in a brief compendious collection of the most remarkable passages and living testimonies of the true church, seed of God, and faithful martyrs in all ages: contained in several ecclesiastical histories & chronological accounts of the succession of the true church from the creation, the times of the fathers, patriarchs, prophets, Christ and the Apostles. Hookes, Ellis, d. 1681. 1664 (1664) Wing H2663A; ESTC R224173 399,190 375

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Prison with him but for other Prisoners to whom he sent several good Epistles of love and Exhortation and many were converted by him from the Iniquity of the times some of which Epistles are as followeth O Ye that Love the Lord see that ye hate the thing that is Evil. A Letter of Robert Smith's to his Wife in Meetre Verses containing good Exhortations written by R. Smith THe God that giveth Life and Light and leadeth into rest That breaketh bonds and bringeth out the Poor that are opprest And keepeth mercy for the Meek his treasure and his store Encrease thy Life in perfect Love both now and evermore That as thou hast begun to ground in Faith and fervent Love Thou mayst be made a mighty Mount that never may remove That thine ensample may be shewed among all thine encrease That they may live and learn the like and pass their time in peace Thy Salutations that were sent I heartily retain And send thee seventy times as much to thee and thine again And for because I know the Gold that thou dost most desire I send thee here a paper full is fined in the Fire In hope thou wilt accept it well although it be but small Because I have none other good to make amends withall For all thy free and friendly facts which thy good will hath wrought I send thee surely for a shift the thing that cost me nought Abstain from all ungodliness in dread direct your dayes Possess not sin in any wise beware of wicked wayes Hold fast your Faith unfeignedly build as you have begun And arm your self in perfect Faith to do as you have done Lest that the wicked make a mock that you have took in hand In leaving of the perfect Rock to build upon the Sand Beware these filthy Pharisees their building is in Blood Eat not with them in any wise their Leaven is not good Their Salt is all unsavory and under good intents They maintain all their knavery and murther Innocents They seek to set in Christs seat and put him out of place And make all means that may be made his doings to deface They keep him down with Bills and Bats that made the blind to see They make a God for Mice and Rat●●● and say the same is he They shew like Sheep and sweat like wolves their baits be all for Blood They kill and slay the simple Souls and rob them of their good The dark illusions of the Devil hath dimmed so their Eyes That they cannot abide the Truth to stir in any wise And if you keep the perfect path as I have hope you do You shall be sure to have such shame as they can put you to For all that lead a goodly life shall surely suffer loss And eke the World will seek their shame and make them kiss 〈◊〉 Cross Ye shall be kild saith Christ your sorrows shall not cease And yet in your afflictions I am your perfect peace For in the World you shall have w● because you are unknown And for because you hate the World the World will love his own Be fervent therefore to the death against all their Decrees And God shall surely fight for thee against thine Enemies Commit thy cause unto the Lord revenge not any evil And thou shalt see the wicked want when thou shalt have thy will For all afflictions that may fall that they can say or do They are not sure of the Wealth we shall attain unto For I have seen the sinners spread their branches like a bay And yet ere one could turn his head were withered clean away Beware that money make you not in riches to arise Against the goodness of the Lord among the worldly wise For many mischiefs it hath made that may not be exprest And many evils it hath begun which may not be redrest For money maketh many one in riches to rebel And he that maketh Gold a God he hath a Soul to sell It maketh Kings to kill and slay and waste their wits in War In leaving of the Wolf at home to hunt the Fox afar And where they should see Justice done and set their Realm in rest By money they be made a mean to see the poor opprest It maketh Lords obey the Laws that they d● ill and nought It maketh Bishops suck the Bl●ol that God hath dearly bought And where they should be faithful Friends and Fathers to the Flock By money they do turn about even like a Weather-Cock The Priest doth make a money mean to have again his whores To p●t away h●● wedd●d Wife and Children out of doores It h●ldeth back the Husband man which may not be forborn And will not suffer him to sow and cast abroad his Corn In like case it doth let again when that the Seed they sow It choake●h up the Corn again so that it cannot grow The H●sband he would have a Wife with Nobles new and old The wife would have the Husband hangd that she might have his Gold It ●a●eth M●rthers many a one and beareth much with Blood Th● Child would see the Parents slain to seize upon their good And though it be a blessed thing created in the kind It is a ●●●●ss●ry evil annexed to the mind For who 〈◊〉 playeth with the pitch his fingers are defild And he that waketh Gold a God shall surely be beguild Be friendly to the Fatherless and all that are opprest Assist ●hem alwayes out of hand and see them set at rest In all your doings and your deeds let mercy still remain For with the measure that you meet shall ye be met again Be alwayes lowly in your life let love enjoy her own The highest Trees are seldom sure and soonest overthrown The Lyons lack and suffer sore in Hunger and in Thurst And they that do oppress the poor continue still accurst The Bee is but a little Beast in body and in sight And yet she bringeth more encrease then either Crow or Kite Therefore beware in any wise keep well your watch alway Be sure of Oyl within your Lamp let not your light decay For death dispiseth them that lack and hateth them that have And treadeth down the rich and poor together in the grave Exhort your Children to be chaste rebuke them for their ill And let not them in any wise be wedded to their will Laught not with them but keep them low shew them no merry cheer Least thou do weep with them also but bring them up in fear And let your light and living shine that ye be not suspect To have the same within your self for which they are correct Be meek and modest in a mean let all your deeds be done That they which are without the Law may see how right you run Keep well the member in your Mouth your Tongue see that you tame For out of little sparks of Fire proceedeth out a flame And as the poyson doth express the nature of the Toad Even so the Tongue doth manifest the
presently for I had often thought of the Prophesie that in the Gospel our Swords should be turned into Plow-shares and our Spears into Pruning-hooks I thought it my duty to plead for Peace and Charity and Forgiveness and Permissions mutual Although we must contend earnestly for the Faith yet this contention must be with Arms sit for the Christian Warfare the Sword of the Spirit the Shield of Faith c. but not with other Arms for a Church-man must not be a Striker for the Weapons of our Warfare are not Carnal but Spiritual I being most of all troubled that men should be persecuted and afflicted for disagreeing in such opinions which they cannot with sufficient grounds obtrude upon others necessarily because they cannot propound them infallibly Considerations are to be had to the Persons of men and to the Laws of Charity more then to the triumphing in any Opinion c. If the Persons be Christians in their life and Christians in their profession if they acknowledge the Eternal Son of God for their Master and the Lord and live in all relations as becomes Persons making such professions why then should I hate such Persons whom God loves and who love God who are pertakers of Christ and Christ hath a Title to them who dwell in Christ and Christ in them because their understandings have not been brought up like mine have not had the same Masters they have not met with the same Books have not the same Opinions that I have and do not determine their School Questions to the same sence of my Sect or Interest And whatsoever is against the Foundation of Faith or contrary to good Life or destructive to humane society is out of the limits of my Question and doth not pretend to compliance or toleration The fault I find and seek to remedy is That men are so dogmatical and resolute in their Opinions and impatient of others disagreeing in those things wherein is no sufficient means of Union and Determination but that men should let Opinions and Problems not be obtruded as Axioms nor Questions in the vast collection of the Systeme of divinity be adopted into the Family of Faith It s hard to say that he who would not have men put to death or punished corporally for such things for which no human Authority is sufficient for Cognizance or Determination or competent for infliction that he perfwades to an indifferency when he refers to another Judicatory which is competent sufficient infallible just and highly severe for God alone must be Judge of these matters who alone is Master of our Souls and hath the Dominion over humane understanding God alone is Judge of erring Persons I earnestly contend that another mans Opinion shall be no Rule to mine and that my Opinion shall be no Snare and Prejudice to my self that men use one another so charitably that no error or violence tempt men to Hypocrisie this very thing being one of the Arguments I used to perswade Permissions lest Compulsion introduce Hypocrisie and make Sincerity troublesom c. From the Dictates of holy Scriptures it is observable that this with its appendant degrees I mean restraint of Prophesying imposing upon other mens understandings being Masters of their Consciences and lording it over their Faith came in with the retinue and train of Antichrist as other abuses and corruptions of the Church did by reason of the iniquity of the times and the cooling of the first heats of Christianity and the increase of interest and the abatements of Christian simplicity when the Churches fortune grew better and her Sons grew worse and some of her Fathers worst of all For in the first three hundred Years there was no sign of persecuting any man for his Opinion though at that time there were very horrid Opinions commenced and they who used all means Christian and Spiritual for their disimprovement and conviction thought not of using corporal force and therefore I do not only urge their not doing it as an Argument of the unlawfulness of such proceeding but their defying it and speaking against such practises as unreasonable and destructive to Christianity for so Tertullina is express Humani juris naturalis potestatis uni cuique quod putaverit colere sed nec religionis est cogere religionem quae suscipi debet sponte non vi it s of humane right and natural power for every one to worship what he thinks but neither is it the part of Religion to compel Religion which ought to be undertaken of its own accord The same is the Doctrine of Cyprian Lactantius Hillary Minutius Faelix Sulpitius Severus Chrisostom Hierom Austin Damaseen Theophilact Socrates Scholasticus and Bernard All wise Princes till they were over-born with Faction and solicited by peevish persons gave Toleration to differing Sects But at first there were some heretical persons that were so impatient they were the men that first intreated the Emperor to persecute the Catholicks but till four hundred years after Christ no Catholick persons or very few did provoke the secular Arm or implore its aid against the Hereticks save only that Arrius behaved himself so seditiously and tumultuarily that the Nicene Fathers procured a temporary Decree for his relegation but it was soon taken off and God left to be his Judge But as the Ages grew worse so men grew more cruel and unchristian and in the Greek Church Atticus and Nestorius of Constantinople Theodocius of Synoda and some few others who had forgotten the mercies of their great master and their own duty grew implacable and furious and impatient of contradiction It was a bold and arrogant Speech which Nestorius made in his Sermon before Theodotius the younger Damihi O Emperator terram ab Haereticis repurgatam ego tibi vicissim coelum dabo disperde mecum Haereticos ego tecum disperdam Persas which is in English O Emperor give to me the Land purged from Hereticks and I instead thereof will give thee heaven destroy me the Hereticks and I will destroy with thee the Persians It was as groundless as unwarrantable as it was bloody and inhumane And we see the contrary events prove truer for Theodosius and Valentinian were prosperous Princes and have the reputation of great piety but they were so far from doing what Nestorius had suggested that they restrained him from his violence and immanity and Theodosius did highly commend B. Proclus for his sweetness of deportment towards erring persons far above the cruelty of his Predecessor Atticus And the experience which Christendom hath had in this last Age is Argument enough That Tole ration of differing Opinions is so far from disturbing the publick peace or destroying the Interest of Princes and Commonwealths that it doth advantage the Publick it secures the Peace because there is not so much as the Pretence of Religion left to such persons to contend for it being already indulged to them When France fought against the Hugonots the spilling of their own
blessing upon any thing you take in hand The Lord my Brethren and Sisters hath not forgotten to be gracious unto Sion you shall yet find dayes of peace and rest if you continue faithful This standing and treading of us under his feet this subverting of our cause and right in Judgment is done by him to the end that we should search and try our wayes and repent us of our Carelesness Prophaneness and Rebellion in his sight but he will yet maintain the Cause of our Souls and redeem our lives if we return to him yea he will be with us in Fire and Water and will not forsake us if our Hearts be only and especially of the Building of Zion whithersoever we go Let not those of you then that either have Stocks in your hands or some likely Trades to live by dispose of your selves where it may be most commodious for your outward Estate and in the mean time suffer the poor ones that have no such means either to bear the whole Work upon their weak Shoulders or to end their dayes in sorrow and mourning for want of outward and inward comforts in the Land of Strangers for the Lord will be an Avenger of all such dealings but consult with the whole Church yea with the Brethren in other places how the Church may be kept together and built whithersoever they go let not the Poor and the Friendless be forced to stay behind here and to break a good Conscience for want of your support and kindness unto them that they may go with you And here I humbly beseech you not in any outward regard as I shall answer before my God that you would take my poor and desolate Widdow and my mess of Fatherless and Friendless Orphans with you into exile whithersoever you go and you shall find I doubt not that the blessed Promises of my God made unto me and mine will accompany them and even the whole Church for their sakes for this also is the Lords Promise unto the holy Seed as you shall not need much to demand what they shall eat or wherewith they shall be clothed and in short time I doubt not but they will be found helpful and not burthensome to the Church only I beseech you let them not continue after you in this Land where they must be inforced to go again unto Aegypt and my God will bless you even with a joyful return unto your own Country for it There are you who I doubt not will be careful of the performance of the will of your dead Brother in this point who may yet live to shew this kindness unto yours I will say no more Be kind loving and tender-hearted the one of you towards the other labour every way to encrease love and to shew the duties of love one of you towards another by visiting comforting and relieving one the other even for the reproach of the Heathen that are round about us as the Lord saith Be watching in prayer especially remember those of our Brethren that are especially endangered particularly those our two Brethren M. Studley and Robert Boule whom our God hath strengthned now to stand in the fore-front of the Battel I fear me that our carelesness was over great to sue unto our God for the lives of these two so notable Lights of his Church who now rest with him and that he took them away for many respects seeming good to his Wisdom so also that we might learn to become careful in prayer in all such causes pray for them then my Brethren and for our Brother M. Fran. Johnson and for me who am likely to end my dayes either with them or before them that our God may spare us unto his Church if it be his good pleasure or give us exceeding faithfulness and be every way comfortable unto the Sister and Wife of the dead I mean unto my beloved M. Barrow and M. Greenwood whom I most heartily salute and desire much to be comforted in their God who by his Blessings from above will countervail unto them the want of so notable a Brother and Husband I would with you earnestly to write yea to send if you may to comfort the Brethren in the West and North Countries that they faint not in these Troubles and that also you may have of their advice and they of yours what to do in these desolate times and if you think it any thing for their further comfort and direction send them conveniently a Copy of this my Letter and of the declaration of my Faith and Allegiance wishing them before whomsoever they be called that their own Mouthes be not had a Witness against them in any thing yea I would wish you and them to be together if you may whithersoever you shall be banished and to this purpose to bethink you before hand where to be yea to send some who may be meet to prepare you some resting place and be all of you assured that he who is your God in England will be your God in any Land under the whole Heaven for the Earth and the fulness thereof are his and blessed are they that for his Cause are bereaved of any part of the same Finally my Brethren the eternal God bless you and yours that I may meet with you all unto my comfort in the blessed Kingdom of Heaven Thus having from my Heart and with tears performed it may be my last duty towards you in this Life I salute you all in the Lord both men and women even those who I have not named as heartily as those whose names I have mentioned for all your names I know not And remember to stand stedfast and faithful in Jesus Christ as you have received him unto your Immortallity And he Confirm and Establish you to the end for the praise of his Glory Amen The 24th of the 4th Moneth April 1593. Your Loving Brother in the Patience and Sufferings of the Gospel John Penry a Witness of Christ in this Life and a Partaker of the Glory that shall be revealed I found also a Letter of the said Penry to his Wife which being large I have only inserted some particular sentences thereof as followeth To my beloved Wife Ellinor Penry Partaker with me in this life of the sufferings of the Gospel in the Kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ and resting with me in undoubted hope of the glory that shall be revealed all strength and comfort with all other spiritual graces be multiplyed through Christ Jesus our Lord. I see my blood layd for my Beloved and so my dayes and Testimony drawing to an end for ought I know and therefore I think it my duty to leave behind me this Testimony of my love towards so dear a Sister and loving a Wife in the Lord as you have been unto me First then I beseech you stand fast in that Truth which you and I profess at this present in much outward discomfort and danger let nothing draw you to be subject
trouble which is momentary and little and as St. Paul saith not Worthy of the things which shall be shewed on us that we patiently carrying our Cross may attain to the place where our Saviour Christ is gone before to the which I beseech God of his Mercy bring us speedily I have been much troubled about your deliverance fearing much the perswasions of Worldlings and have found a Friend which will I trust find a mean for you if you be not already provided desiring you in any case to abide such order as those my Friends shall appoint in God and bear well in mind the words which I spake at our departing that as God hath found us and also elected us worthy to suffer with him we may endeavour our selves to follow uprightly in this our Vocation desiring you to present my hearty commendations to all our Friends and especially to your Parents keeping your matter close in any wise give most hearty thanks to my Friends which only for our Cause are come to Windsor continue in prayer do well be faultless in all things beware of Abominations keep clean from sin pray for me as I do for you and most entirely desire you to send me word if you lack any thing The Lord Jesus preserve you and yours Amen From Newgate the fifteenth of April By your Husband Robert Smith A Sententious Letter of Robert Smith's to his Wife Seek first to Love God dear Wife with your whole heart and then shall it be eafie to love your Neighbour Be friendly to all Creatures and especially to your own Soul Be alwayes an Enemy to the Devil and the World but especially to your own Flesh In hearing good things joyn the ears of your head and heart together Seek unity and quietness with all men but especially with your Conscience for he will not easily be entreated Love all men but especially your Enemies Hate the sin● that are past but especially those to come Be as ready to further your Enemy as he is to hinder you that you may be the Child of God Remember that God hath hedged in your Tongue with the Teeth and Lips that it might speak under correction Be ready at all times to lock to your Brothers Eye but especially to your own Eye for he that warneth others of that he himself is faulty doth give his Neighbour the clear Wine and keepeth the Dregs for himself Shew mercy unto the Saints for Christs sake and Christ shall reward you for the Saints sake Amongst all other Prisoners visit your own Soul for it is inclosed in a perillous Prison If you will love God hate Evil and you shall obtain the reward of well doing Thus fare you well good Anne have me heartily commended to all that love the Lord unfainedly I beseech you have me in your prayer while I am living and I am assured the Lord will accept it bring up my Children and yours in the Fear of God and then shall I not fail but receive you together in the everlasting Kingdom of God which I go unto Your Husband Robert Smith Robert Smith to all faithful Servants of Christ exhorting them to be strong under Persecution Content thy self with patience with Christ to bear the Cross of pain Which can and will thee recompence a thousand fold with Joyes again Let nothing cause thy heart to quail Launch forth thy Boat hail up thy Sail Put from the Shore And be thou sure thou shalt attain Unto the Port that shall remain For evermore About this time died Steven Harwood at Stratford and Thomas Fust at Ware About the same time VVilliam Haile of Th●rp in the County of Essex was condemned and burnt Will. Haile Martyr when he received the Sentence of condemnation he gave this exhortation to the lookers on Ah good People said he beware of this Idolatry and this Anti-christ pointing to the Bishop of London he was burnt at Barnet George King Thomas Leys and John VVade being Prisoners in Lollards Tower fell sick and died and were buried by some of the faithfull Brethren VVilliam Andrew being twice brought before Bonner upon Examination manfully stood in the defence of his Religion at length through strait handling in the Prison of Newgate there he lost his life Robert Samuell committed to Ipswich Goal Rob. Samuell Martyr and from thence removed to Norwich where Bishop Hopton or his Chancellor were the cause of his being kept very close Prisoner at his first coming where he was Chained bolt upright to a Post keeping him for some time without meat and drink except it were a small morsel of Bread and a little Water he Suffered Death the 31th of August 1555. Next after Robert Samuell was burnt William Allen of VValsingham Will. Allen Martyr Labourer upon Examination the Bishop askt him why he was imprisoned he said it was because he would not follow the Cross and said if he saw the King and Queen follow the Cross or bow down to it he would not for which Sentence of Death was given against him he was burned about the beginning of September at VValsingham who declared such Constancy at his Martyrdom and had such Credit with the Justices by reason of his upright and well tryed Conversation among them that he was suffered to go untyed to his suffering and there being fastned with a Chain stood quietly without shrinking untill he died The Martyrdom of Roger Coo of Melford in Suffolk Sheer-man first Examined before the Bishop of Norwich and by him Condemned 12th of August 1555. Bishop Why was you Imprisoned Robert Coo Examined Coo At the Justices Commandment Bishop There was some cause why Coo Here is my Accuser let him declare Accuser He will not receive the Sacrament Bishop said he thought he had transgress●d the Law Coo There is no Law to transgress that I know Accuser Nor will not know my Lord ask him when be received the Sacrament Coo seeing the Accuser so bold said to the Bishop let him sit down and examine me himself but the Bishop would not hear that but after some other discourse the Bishop askt him whether he would not obey the Kings Laws Coo As far as they agree with the Word of God I will obey them Bishop Whether they agree with the Word of God or not we are bound to obey them if the King were an Infidel Coo If Sydrach Mesack and Abed●eg● had so done Nebucad●nezzer had not confessed the Living God In the same Moneth was Thom●● Cobb of Haveril Butcher Tho. Cobb Martyr burned in the Town of Thatford Upon the third day of the sixth Moneth called August were brought before Thornton Bishop of Dover George Catmer of Hithe Robert Streater of Hithe Anthony Burward of Calet George Brodbridge of Bromfield James Tutty of Brenchly and were examined particularly touching the Sacrament of the Altar Aurticular Confession and other such like Ceremonies To which Catmer answered on this wise Christ said he sitteth in Heaven on the
good to rost a shoulder of Mutten but evil in the Church whereby Idolatry was committed when the Articles were answered the Chancellor read their Condemnation and so delivered them to the Sheriff to whom John Spicer said now you must be their Butcher that you may be guilty also with them of Innocent Blood before the Lord. The 24th day of the Moneth called March they were had to the place of Execution where they kneeled down and prayed secretly and then being disclothed to their Shirts John Mundrell spoke with a Loud voice Not for all Salsbury which words men judged to be an answer to the Sheriff who offered him the Queens Pardon if he would recant and after this in like manner spake John Spicer This is the joyfullest day that ever I saw Thus did they most constantly give their Bodies to the Fire and their Souls to the Lord for a Testimony to his Truth Six persons burnt in Smithfield About the 23th day of the Moneth called April 1556 were burned in Smithfield at one Fire these six persons viz. Robert Drakes William Tymis Richard Spurge Thomas Spurge John Cavel Q. Mary An. 1556 and George Ambross they were all of Essex and so of the Diocess of London they were sent up at sundry times by Lord Rich and others and by Gardner Bishop of Winchester then Lord Chancellor of England committed some to the Marshal-sea and some to the Kings-Bench where they remained almost the whole year before they were brought to Examination Some Passages in their Examination are as followeth After six or seven hours discourse between the Bishop of London and Bath with William Tymis they were weary and began to pity Tymis's case and to slater him saying Ah good Fellow thou art bold and thou hast a good fresh Spirit we would thou hadest learning to thy Spirit I thank you said he and both you be learned and I would you had a good Spirit to your learning The Bishop seeing Tymis his hoase part white and part of a sheeps russet in a mocking manner said Ah Sirrah are you a Deacon Yea that I am said he So me thinketh said the Bishop you are decked like a Deacon Said Tymis Me-thinks my Vesture doth not so much vary from a Deacon but your Apparel doth as much vary from an Apostle And one of the Bishops men said Scoffingly my Lord give him a Chair a Tost and Drink and he will be Lusty But the Bishop said Have him away till another time The 28th day of March the aforesaid six Martyrs were brought to the open Consistory in Pauls before Bishop Bonner to be condemned for Heresie Bishop said Tymis I le begin with thee for thou art and hast been the Ring-leader of these thy Companions thou hast taught them Heresies and Confirmed them in their Err●ous Opinions endeavouring to make them like thy self Tymis said I Marvel you will begin with a Lye you call me the Ring-leader and Teacher of this Company There is none of all these my Brethren which are brought hither as Prisoners but when they were at liberty and out of Prison dissented from you and your doings as much as they do now and for that cause they are now Prisoners so that they learned not their Religion in Prison and as for me I never knew them till I was committed Prisoner with them and as for my fault which you make so greivous whatsoever you judge of me I am well assured that I hold no other Religion then Christ Preached the Apostles Witnessed the Primitive Church received and now of late hath been faithfully taught by Evangelical Preachers for which you have cruelly burned them and now you seek our Blood also proceed on hardly by what rule you will I fear not Then the Bishop proceeded to pass the Sentence upon him and then upon the rest and after he had condemned them he ridded his bloody hands of them delivering them to the Sheriffs of London who sent them to Newgate where they remained till the 14th day of the Moneth called April and then sealed their Faith with their Blood The Substance of a Letter of William Tymis to his Friends in Hookly The Grace of God the Father through the Merrits of his dear Son Jesus our Lord and only Saviour with the continual aid of his holy and mighty Spirit to the performance of his will to our Everlasting comfort be with you my dear Brethren both now and evermore Amen My dearly beloved I beseech God to reward the great goodness that you have shewed unto me seven fold into your Bosoms and as you have alwayes had a most godly love unto his Word even so I beseech him to give you grace to love your own Souls and then I trust that you will flee from all those things that should displease our good and mercifull God and hate and abhor all the Company of these that would have you to Worship God any otherwise then is contained in his holy Word and beware of those Masters of Idolatry that is these Papistical Priests My dear Brethren for the tender mercy of God remember well what I have said unto you and also written the which I am now ready to seal with my Blood I praise God that ever I lived to see the day and blessed be my good and mercifull God that ever he gave me a body to glorifie his Name And dear hearts I do now write unto you for none other cause but to put you in rememberance that I have not forgot you to the end that I would not have you forget me but to remember well what I have simply by word of Mouth and Writing taught you the which although it were most simply done yet truely as your own Conscience beareth me record and therefore in any case take good heed that you do not that thing which your own Conscience doth condemn therefore come out of Sodom and go to Heaven-ward with the Servants and Martyrs of God least you be partakers of the Vengeance of God that is coming upon this Wicked Nation from the which the Lord God defend you c. Thus now I take my leave of you forever in this World except I be burned amongst you which thing is uncertain unto me as yet By me your poorest and most unworthy Brother in Christ William Tymis in Newgate the 12th day of April condemned to die for Christs Truth Joan Beech of Tumbridge and John Harpool of Rochester were both condemned for the Truth of the Gospel by Morrice Bishop of Rochester and were Sufferers together at one Fire in Rochester the first day of the Moneth called April 1556. The next day after suffered in the like Cause at Cambridge one John Hullier Some Sentences taken out of a Letter written by the said John Hullier are as followeth John Hullier being of long time Prisoner and now openly judged for the Testimony of the Lord Jesus wisheth heartily to the whole Congregation of God the strength of
Another Letter of John Rough's written to the Congregation two dayes before he suffered The Spirit of all Consolation be with you aid you and make you strong to run to the fight that is laid before you wherewithal God in all Ages hath tryed his Elect and hath found them worthy of himself by coupling to their Head Christ Jesus in whom who so desireth to live godly the same must needs suffer Persecution for it is given unto them not only to believe but also to suffer and the Servant or Scholler cannot be greater then his Lord or Master But by the same way the Head is entered the Members must follow no life is in the Members which are cut from the Body likewise we have no life but in Christ for in him we live move and have our being dear Hearts now departing this life to my great advantage I make change of Mortallity with Immortallity of Corruption to put on Incorruption to make my Body like to the Corn cast into the ground which except it die first can bring forth no good Fruit wherefore Death is to me great advantage for thereby the Body ceaseth from sin and afterwards turneth into the first Original but after it shall be changed and made brighter then the Sun or Moon what shall I writ of this corporal death seeing it is decreed of God that all men shall once dye happy are they that dye in the Lord which is to dye in the Faith of Christ professing and confessing the same before many Witnesses I praise my God I have past the same Journey by many Temptations the Devil is very busy to perswade the World to entice with promises and fair words which I omit to write least some might think I do hunt after vain glory which is farthest from my heart Lastly the danger of some false Brethren who before the Bishop of London purposed to confess an Untruth to my face yet the God that rul'd Balaam moved their hearts where they thought to speak to my Accusation he made them speak to my purgation what a Journey by Gods power I have made these eight dayes before this day it is above Flesh and Blood to bear but as Paul saith I may do all things in him which worketh in me Jesus Christ My course Brethren have I run I have fought a good fight the Crown of Righteousness is laid up for me my day to receive it is not long to pray Brethren for the Enemy doth yet assault stand constant unto the end then shall you possest your Souls walk worthily in that vocation wherewith you are called comfort the Brethren salute one another in my name be not ashamed of the Gospel of the Cross by me preached nor yet of my suffering for with my Blood I affirm the same I go before I suffer first the baiting of the Butchers dogs yet I have not done what I should have done but my weakness I doubt not is supplyed in the strength of Jesus Christ and your Wisdoms and Learning will accept that small Talent which I have distributed unto you as I trust as a faithful Steward and what was undone impute that to frailty and ignorance and with your love cover that which is and was naked in me God knoweth ye are all tender unto me my heart bursteth for the love of you ye are not without your great Pastour of your Souls who so loveth you that if men were not to be sought out as God be praised there is no want of men he would cause stones to Minister unto you cast your care upon that Rock the Wind of Temptation shall not prevail fast and pray for the dayes are evil look up with your Eyes of hope for the Redemption is not far off And also that which is behind of the blood of our Brethren which shall also be laid under the Altar shall cry for your relief time will not now suffer me to write longer Letters the Spirit of God guide you in and our rising and sitting cover you with the Shaddow of his Wings defend you against the Tyranny of the Wicked and bring you happily unto the Part of eternal felicity where all tears shall be wiped from your eyes and you shall alwayes abide with the Lamb. John Rough. The Sufferings and cruel Torments sustained by Cutbert Simson of London at the hands of the cruel Papists This Cuthbert Simsion was a man of a zealous and faithful Spirit for Christ and the true Flock in London Cuthbert Simson Martyr in that day wherein they greatly suffered he ceased not daily to labour and earnestly to endeavour their preservation from the corruption of the Popish Religion his pains zeal travil patience and sidelity was not easily to be expressed as saith the Record A Relation of his cruel Usage in the Tower is as followeth On the 13th day of the Moneth called December he was sent to the Tower by the Councel and on the Thursday following he was called into the Ware-house before the Constable of the Tower and the Recorder of London who prest him to discover the persons he had willed to come to the Meeting he belonged to but he answered he would declare nothing whereupon he was set in the Rack of Iron the space of three hours then they asked him If he would tell them he answered as before then was he loosed and carried to his Lodging and on the day called Sunday following was brought to the same place again before the Lievtenant and Chelmly Recorder of London who again Examined him he answered as before Then the Lievtenant swore by God he should tell and caused his two fore-fingers to be bound together and put a small Arrow betwixt them and drew it threw so fast that the blood followed and the Arrow broke then they Rackt him twice and then carried him to his Lodging again and ten dayes after the Lievtenant asked him If he would confess to whom he answered He had said as much as he would then about five weeks after he sent him to a high Priest who past the Popes curse upon him forbearing Witness to the Resurrection of Jesus Christ When he was brought before Bonner several Articles were objected against him as denying the Sacraments and Ceremonies of the Church and for being at several great Meetings Assemblies and Conventicles At the same time there were two other persons Examined before Bonner viz. Hugh Fox Hugh Fox and Jo. Devenish Martyrs and John Devenish against whom the general common Articles were produced and they were condemned and burnt with Cuthbert Simson in Smithfield upon the 28th day of the Moneth called March for whose constancy to the Lord in his Quarrel his Name be exalted for evermore Some Passages wrote in a Letter from Cuthbert Simson to his Wife out of the Cole-house are as followeth Dearly beloved in the Lord Jesus Christ I cannot writ as I do wish unto you I beseech you with my Soul commit your self under the mighty hand of