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A57667 Pansebeia, or, A view of all religions in the world with the severall church-governments from the creation, to these times : also, a discovery of all known heresies in all ages and places, and choice observations and reflections throughout the whole / by Alexander Ross. Ross, Alexander, 1591-1654.; Haestens, Henrick van.; Davies, John, 1625-1693. 1655 (1655) Wing R1972_pt1; Wing R1944_pt2; ESTC R216906 502,923 690

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Eagle to Iupiter The Cock to the Sun The Magpie to Mars The Raven to Apollo c. They had also their peculiar Trees Iupiter the Oke Pallas the Olive Venus the Mirtle Pluto the Cypress Bacchus the Vine Hercules the Poplar Apollo the Lawrel c. Q. what Religious Rites did the Romans use in their Marriages A. In their marriages they used prayers in which they called upon the chief Wedding gods to wit Iupiter Iuno Venus Diana and Pytho or Suadela Before they married they consulted with their Auspices who encouraged or discouraged them according to the Birds they saw the best Auspicium was either two Crowes or two Turtles these signified long and true love but to see one of these alone was ominous After this sight they went to their prayers and in the Temple before the Altar were married first sacrificing a Hog to Iuno Cui Vincla jugalia curae for she had the chief care of marriages the gall of the sacrifices the Priests flung away to shew there should be no gall in the married life They must not marrie upon unluckie dayes such were the dayes after the Calends Nones and Ides these were called dies atri or black dayes such a day was that which was kept in memory of Remus killed by his brother called Lemuria or Lemulia Neither must they marrie on Funeral dayes nor on Festivals nor when there was any Earth-quake or Thunder or Stormy weather no such commotions must be in marriages The Bride was besprinkled with water to signifie her purity and in the Entry or Porch she must touch the fire and water placed to shew she must pass through all difficulties with her Husband In the wedding Chamber were placed certain Dieties or Idols rather to shew what was to be done in that place these were Virginensis Subjugus Prem● Pertunda Manturna Venus and Priapus Their other Rites which were rather Politick then religious I touch not as not being to my purpose Q. What were their Religious Rites in Funerals A. The Corps was wont to be washed anointed crowned by the Priest and placed in the porch of his house with a Cypresse tree before it every thing that was to be imployed in the Funerall was to be bought in the Temple of Venus Libitina to shew that the same diety which brought us into the world carrieth us out of it The eyes of the dead bodies were closed upon the going out of the breath but opened again in the Funeral pile that by looking towards Heaven they might signifie the soule was gone thither which also they expresse by the flying of the Eagle out of the same pile where the Emperors body was burned The place for the burial was appointed by the Pontifices and Augures Before the pile were wont to be sacrificed Captives to pacifie the infernal Ghosts but this being held too cruel Gladiators were appointed to fight and for want of these Women were hired to teare their Cheeks but this custome was forbid by the Law of the twelve Tables The Priest after the fire was burned gathered the bones and ashes washed them with wine put them in an Urn and besprinkled the people three times with holy Water For the number of three was sacred So was 7. and 9. Therefore upon those days they used to keep Festivals in memory of the dead Altars adorned with Cypress boughs and blew Laces were wont to be erected to the Ghosts and on them Frankincense Wine Oyl Milk and Blood Q. Why was the burying of the dead held an act of Religion A. Because it was held an act of justice and mercy both to bury the dead of justice that earth should be restored to earth and dust to dust for what could be more just then to restore to mother earth her children that as she furnished them at first with a material being with food rayment sustentation and all things needfull so she might at last receive them again into her lap and afford then lodging till the Resurrection whereof some of the wiser Gentiles were not ignorant it was also an act of mercy to hide the dead bodies in the earth that those organs of such a divine soul might not be torne by wild Beasts and Birds and buried in their mawes That disconsolate mother of Euryalus in the Poet is not so much grieved for the murthering of her Son as for that he should be left a prey to the Birds and Beasts Heu terrâ ignotâ cunibus data praeda Latinis Alitibusque jaces It was held among the Egyptians one of the greatest punishments that could be inflicted to want the honour of burial and with this punishment Iehoiakim the Son of Iosiah is threatned Ierem. 22. 19. That he should be buried with the burial of an Asse and cast forth beyond the gates of Jerusalem And the Milesian Virgins were terrified from hanging themselves by the Law of their Senat that such self-murtherers should have their bodies dragged naked through the streets in the same rope wherewith they hanged themselves Mezentius in the Poet doth not desire Aenaeus to spare his life but earnestly intreats him to afford him burial Nullum in caede nefas nec sic in praelia veni Vnum hec per siqua est victis venia hostibus ore Corpus humo patiare tegi c. So Turnus intreats for the same favour from Aenaeas si corpus poliari luinine mavis Redde meis Aen. 12. The right of Sepulture hath been held so sacred among all civil nations of the Gentiles that the violation thereof hath by their Lawes been counted Sacriledge Therefore they have ascribed to their gods the patronage of funerals and Sepultures for this cause they called the Law of interring the Law of their gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isocrates in Panatheniaco sheweth that the right of Sepulture is not so much humane as divine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The burying of the dead is commended by the Pagan writers as a work of humanity mercy clemency piety justice and religion therefore the Latine pharse yet doth intimate how just a thing it is to bury the dead when they call Funerals Deities justa exequiarum or justa funebria We read in Homer Iliad 24. how angry Iupiter and Apollo were with Achilles for abusing and neglecting to bury the body of Hector shewing that Achilles had lost all mercy and modesty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And to shew how religious an act it is to bury the dead the Gentiles assign the care of Funerals and Sepulchres to certain gods which they called Manes whose chief was Pluto called therefore Summanus hence all Tombs and Monuments were dedicated Diis manibus and therefore they who offered any violence to Tombs were said to violate the Manes Deorum Manium jura sancta sunto Of this you may see more in our Mystagogus Poeticus It was counted an execrable thing if any should light upon a dead body unburied and not cast earth
Oyle puts on his ●wle and so receives him into the Fraternity having vowed abstinence from flesh and perpetual chastity The Monks do not onely live upon their rents but they trade also and are great Merchants as for scholarship they have none Sergius is a great Saint ●mongst them to whom the Empress goeth sometimes in Pilgrimage They have divers Nunneries some whereof are onely for Noble mens Widows and Daughters whose stock the Emperor meanes to ex●i●guish They have E●emites also who go stark naked except about the middle they wear long hair and an l●on collar about their neck or middle The people esteem them as Saints and Prophets and whatsoever they say is received as Oracles even by the great Duke himselfe He thinks himself in great favour with God who is reproved or robbed of any part of his goods by them But of these E●emites there be very few in that cold country Q. 5. What form of Service have they in their Churches A. They have their Matti●s every morning the Priest attended by his Deacon in the middle of the Church calls on Christ for a blessing in the name of the Trinity and then repeats three times Lord have mercy upon us this done he marcheth into the chancel whither no man may enter but the Priest alone and there at the Altar he sayeth the Lords prayer and twelve times Lord have mercy upon us Then Praised at the Trinity The Deacon and people answer Amen Then he reads the Psalmes for the day and with the people turns to the Images on the wall to which they bow three times knocking their heads to the ground Then he reads the Decalogue and Athanasius his Creed After this the Deacon standing without the Chancel door reads a part of their Legend of Saints lives which is divided into so many parts as there be days in the year then he addeth some collects or prayers This Service lasteth about two hours all which time many Wax Candles burn before their Images some as big as a mans wast such are vowed and enjoyned by pe●nance They have about nine of the morning another service and on Festival days they have solemn devotion The evening service is begun like the marnings after the Psalmes the Priest singeth the 〈◊〉 in their Language and then all with one voice Lord have mercy upon us thirty times together and the boyes answer thirty times then is read by the Priest and on holy days sung the first Psalme and 〈◊〉 repented ten times Then the Priest reads some part of the Gospel which he ends with three Hallelujahs and withal that evening service with a collect for the day all this while the Priest standeth as the high 〈◊〉 The Deacon● stand without the Chancel whither they dare not come during service time The people stand together in the body of the Church for they have no Pews to sit in Q. 6. How do they administer the Sacraments 〈…〉 Eight days after the Child is born he is brought to the Church-porch where the Priest receives him and tells the witnesses their duties in the childs education after baptisme namely to teach him how to know God and Christ and withal what Saints are the chiefe mediators then he conjures the Devil out of the water and so after some prayers he plungeth the child three times over head and ears in a tub of warm water holding it necessary that every part of the child be dipped They use the same words that we do In the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost and not By the Holy Ghost as some Hereticks have used Then the Priest lay●th oyl and salt mixed together on the Childes forehead on both sides of his face and on his lips praying that God would make him a good Christian c. This done the child being now made a Christian is carried from the Porch into the Church The Priest marching before who layeth him on a cushion before the feet of the chief Image in the Church to which he is recommended as to his Mediator After baptisme the childs hair is cut off wrapped up in wax and reserved as a relique in the Church The Russians use to re-bapbaptise their Proselyte Christians and in some Monasterie to instruct them in their religion first they cloath the new convert with a fresh Russian Garment then they crown him with a Garland anoint his head with oyl put a wax light into his hand and for seven days together pray over him four times a day all which time he is to forbear flesh and white meats After the seventh day he is washed and on the eighth day is brought into the Church and there instructed how to bow knock his head and crosse himself before their images The Russians communicate but once a year in Lent after confession to the Priest who calls them up to the Altar askes them if they be clean from sin if they be they are admitted but never above three at one time Whilest the Priest prayeth the communicants stand with their ●rms folded one within another then he delivereth to them a spoonful of bread and wine tempered together saying Eat this drink this without any pause Then he delivereth bread by it self and wine mingled with warm water to represent the water and bloc● that issued out of Christ side Then the Communicants follow the Priest thrice about the Altar with their folded arms At last after prayers the Priest chargeth them to make good cheer and be merry for seven days together to fast the next seven days after Q. 7. What is the Doctrine and Ceremonies of the Russian Church at this day A They hold that the Books of Moses except Genesis are not to be read in Churches and are of no use since Christs comming nor the Prophets nor the Revelation 2. They teach that their Church traditions are of equal authority with the word of God 3. That the Greek Church chiefly the Patriarch and his Synod have full authority to interpret the Scriptures and that their interpretation is authentick 4. That the Holy Ghost proceedeth not from the Son 5. They hold Christ to be the onely mediator of redemption but not of intercession this honour they give to the Saints chiefly to the Virgin Mary and Saint Nichola● who they say is attended upon by three hundred of the chief Angels 6. Their doctrine and practise is to adore the Images or Pictures of the Saints whereof their Churches are full and richly adorned 7. They teach that in this life there can be no assurance of salvation 8. And that we are justified not by faith only but by works also which consist in prayers by number on their beads in fasts vows almes crossings offerings to Saints and such like 9. They ascribe great power to auricular confession in doing away sin 10. They hold al to be damned that dye without baptism 11. Extream Unction is with them a Sacrament though not of such
Father of Christ and author of the Gospel but Moses Law they rejected and the old Testament as proceeding from the other god to wit of justice The Cerdonians also denyed the Resurrection of the flesh and Humanity of Christ Affirming that he was not born of a Virgin nor suffered but in shew Marcion by birth a Paphlagonian neer the Euxin Sea was Cerdons Scholar whose opinions he preferred to the Orthodox Religion out of spleen because his Father Bishop Marcion excommunicated him for Whoredom and because he could not without true repentance be received again into the Church therefore he professed and maintained Cerdons Heresies at Rome in the time of M. Antoninus Philosophus 133. years after Christ but he refined some points and added to them some of his own phansies With Cerdon he held two contrary gods and denied Christs Incarnation of the Virgin and therefore blotted his Genealogy out of the Gospel affirming his body to be from heaven not from the Virgin He denied that this world by reason of the Ataxie and Disorder in it could be the work of the good god He rejected the Old Testament and the Law as repugnant to the Gospel which is false for their is no repugnancy He denied the Resurrection and taught that Christ by descending into hell delivered from thence the souls of Cain Esau the Sodomites and other reprobates translating them into heaven He condemned the eating of flesh and the married life and renewed baptism upon every grievous fall into sin If any of the Catechumeni died some in their name were baptised by the Marcionites They also baptised and administred the Eucharist in presence of the Catechumeni against the custom of the Church They permitted Women also to baptize They condemned all Wars as unlawfull and held transanimation with the Pythagoreans Q. 15. What was the Religion of Apelles Severus and Tatianus A. Apelles whose scholars were called Apellitae was Marcions Disciple and a Syrian by birth He flourished under Commodus the Emp●ror about 150. years after Christ. He taught that there was but one chief God to whom was subordinat a fierie God who appeared to Moses in the bush who made the world and gave the Law to the Israelites and was their God He gave to Christ a body compacted of the Stary and Elementary substance and appeared in the shape onely of man This body when he ascended he left behind him every part thereof returning to their former principles and that Christs spirit is onely in heaven He rejected the Law and Prophets and denied the Resurrection Severus author of the Severians was contemporarie with Apelles under Commodus 156. years after Christ. He used the company of one Philumena a Strumpet and Witch He taught his disciples to abstain from Wine as being poyson begot of Satan in the form of a Serpent with the Earth The world he said was made by certain Powers of Angels which he called by divers barbarous names He hated Women and Marriage denied the Resurrection the Old Testament and Prophets using in stead of them certain Apocryphall Books Tatianus a bad Scholar of a good Master Iustin Martyr was a Mesopotamian by birth and lived under M. Antoninus Philosophus 143. years after Christ his disciples were called Tatiani from him and Encratitae from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 temperance or continence for they abstain from Wine Flesh and Marriage They were called also Hydro-Paristatae users of Water for in stead of Wine they made use of Water in the Sacrament They held that Adam was never restored to mercy after his fall And that all men the sons of Adam are damned without hope of salvation except the Tatiani They condemned the Law of Moses the eating of flesh and the use of wine and held Procreation of Children to be the work of Satan yet they permitted though unwilingly Monogamy or the marrying once but never again they denied that God made male and female and that Christ was the seed of David Q. 16. Of what Religion were the Cataphrygians A. Montanus disciple to Tatianus who was his contemporary was author of this Sect who for a while were from him called Montanists but being ashamed of his wicked life and unhappy end they were afterward from the Country where he was born and which was first infected with his heresie called Cataphrygians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were named also Tascodragitae because they used in praying to thrust their forefingers into their Nostrills to shew their devotion and anger for sin Tascus in their Language signifieth a long slick or slaff and Druggus their Nose as if you would say Perticonasati as the interpreter of Epiphanius translates it They loved to be called Spirituales because they bragged much of the gifts of the Spirit others that were not of their opinion they called naturual men This Heresie began about 145. years after Christ and lasted above 500. years He had two Strumpets which followed him to wit Prisca and Maximilla these forsook their Husbands pretending zeal to follow Montanus whereas indeed they were notorious Whoors they took upon them to prophesie and their dictates were held by Montanns as divine oracles but at last he and they for company hanged themselves He blasphemously held himself not onely to be in a higher measure inspired by the Holy Ghost then the Apostles were but also said that he was the very Spirit of God which in some small measure descended on the Apostles he condemned second marriages and yet allowed Incest He trusted altogether to Revelations and Enthusiasmes and not to the Scripture In the Eucharist these wretches mingled the Bread with Infants Blood they confounded the persons of the Trinity affirming the Father suffered Q. 17. What was the Religion of the Pepuzians Quintilians and Artotyrites A. These were disciples of the Cataphrygians Pepuzians were so called from Pepuza a town between Galatia and Cappadocia where Montanus dwelt and Quintillians from Quintilla another whorish Prophetesse and companion to Prisca and Maximilla They held Peprza to be that new Ierusalem fore told by the Prophets and mentioned in the Epistle to the Hebrews and in the Revelatien In this they said we should enjoy life eternal They perferred Women before Men affirming that Christ assumed the form of a Women not of a Man And that he was the author of their wicked Tenets They commended Eve for eating the forbidden fruit saying that by so doing she was the author of much happinesse to man They admitted Woman to Ecclesiastical functions making Bishops and Priests of them to preach and administer the Sacraments They mingled also the Sacramental Bread with humane Blood The Artotyritae were so called from offering Bread and Cheefe in the Sacrament in stead of Wine because our first Parents offered the fruits of the Earth and of sheep and because God excepted Abels sacrifice which was the fruits of his sheep of which Cheese cometh therefore they held cheese
one Nature and one Will some affirming him to be onely God some onely man some made up of both some altogether deny him some will have his body come from Heaven some from the Virgin some from the Elements some wil have our Souls Mortal some Immortal some bring it into the body by infusion some by traduction some wil have the soul created before the world some after some will have them created altogether others severally some will have them corporeal some incorporeal some of the substance of God some of the substance of the body So infinitly are mens conceits distracted with variety of opinions whereas there is but one truth which every man dims at but few attain it every man thinks he hath it and yet few enjoy it The main causes of these distractions are pride self-love ambition contempt of Church and Scripture the Humour of Contradiction the Spirit of Faction the desire of Innovation the want of preserment in high Spirits Anger Envy the benefit that ariseth to some by fishing in troubled waters the malignant eye that some have on the Churches prospe●ity the greedy appetite others have to Quailes and the Flesh-Pots of Egypt rather then to Manna though sent from Heaven the want or contempt of Authority Discipline and order in the Church which like Bulwarks Walls or Hedges keep out the wild Boars of the Forfest from rooting up the Lords Vineyard and the little Foxes from eating up the Grapes thereof Therefore wise Governours were forced to authorize Bishops Moderatours or Superintendents call them what you will for regulating curbing and punishing such luxurious wits as disturbed the peace of the Church and consequently of the State by their fantastical inventions knowing that too much liberty was no lesse dangerous then Tyranny too much mercy as pernitious as cruelty and a general permission in a Kingdom or State no lesse hazzardous to the publick tranquillity then a general restriction The Contents of the Ninth Section The first original of the Monastical Life 2. The first Eremites or Anchorites 3. The manner of their living 4. Their Excesses in Religion 5. The preheminence of the Sociable Life to the Solitary 6. The first Monks after Anthonie 7. The rules of Saint Basil. 8. Saint Hieroms order 9. Saint Austins order 10. If Saint Austin instituted his Eremites to beg 11. Of Saint Austins Leathern Girdle used at this day 12. The institutions and exercises of the first Monks 13. Why Religious persons cut their Haire and Beards 14. Whence came that custom of Shaving 15. Of the Primitive Nuns 16. Of What account Monks are at this day in the Roman Church 17. How the Monks and Nuns of old were consecrated 18. The Benedictine order 19. Of the orders proceeding from them 20. Of Saint Bennets rules to his Monks 21. The Benedictines Habit and Dyet 22. Rules prescribed by the Councel of Aix to the Monks 23. The Rites and Institutions of the Monks of Cassinum 24. The manner of electing their Abbots 25. The Benedictine Nuns and their rule 26. Of the Laws and Priviledges of Monasteries SECT IX Quest. 1. HAving taken a view of the Opinions in Christian Religion for 1600 years it remains that we now take notice of the strictest observers thereof therefore tell us who they were that separated themselves from other Christians not so much in opinion as in place and strictnesse of living and what was the first original of this separation A. When the Christian Religion in the beginning was opposed by persecutors many holy men and women to avoid the fury of their persecutors retired into desart places where they gave themselves to fasting prayer and meditation in the Scriptures These were called Eremites from the Desart where they lived and Monachi from their single or solitary life And Anchorites from living a part by themselves Such were Paul the Eremite Anthony Hilarion Basil Hierom and others Afterward the Eremites growing weary of the Desarts and Persecution at an end betook themselves into Towns and Cities where they lived together and had all things in common within one building which they called Monastery Covent or Cloyster These Monks were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Worshippers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exercisers or Wrestlers in Christianity Clerici also as being the Lords inheritance and Philosophers from their study and contemplation of Divine and Humane things Their houses were called Caenobia because they held all things among them in common and Claustra or Cloysters because there they were inclosed from the rest of the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schools of cares and discipline and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 places of exercise As the men had their peculiar Houses or Cloysters so had the women who were willing to separate themselves from the world these were called N●nn● or Nuns from the Egyptian word Nennus for there were the first Monasteries from their solitary life they are named Moniales and from their holinesse Sanctimoniales and from the Roman phrase Virgines Vestoles now because these holy men and women lived at first in caves and subterraneal holes they were named Mandritae for Mandrae signifies caves or holes and Troglodyta from those Ethiopians in Arabia neer the Red Sea who lived on Serpents flesh and Roots whose skins were hardned with the nights cold and tanned with the Suns heat They were so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their caves where they dwelt Q. 2. Who were the first Eremites or Anchorites A. If we take Eremites for such as have lived in desarts for a while to avoid persecution then we may say that Eliah Iohn Baptist and Christ himself were Eremites For they were forced sometimes to live an Eremitical or solitary life in desarts But if by Eremites we understands such as wholly addicted themselves to an Eremitical or solitary life from the world and worldly affairs that they might the more freely give themselves to fasting prayer and contemplation then the first Eremite we read of since Christ was Poul the Theban who having lost in the persecution under Decius both his Parents and fearing to be betrayed by his Sisters Husband betook himself to a cave at the foot of a Rocky Hill ●bout the year of Christ 260. and there continued all his life to wit from fifteen years of age till he died which was the one hundred and thirteenth year of his life All which time he saw no body but Antonius who being Ninety years old by divine instinct came to Paul on the day he died This Antonius instituted this Eremitical life in Egypt Being twenty years old he sold his Estate and bestowed it on the poor then in remote places he lived alone but that sometimes he would visit his disciples At 35. years he betook himself to the desart till he was 55. Then he returned to the Cities and preached Christ there Afterward he returned again to the desart where he spent the remainder of his life and dyed the 105. year of
power to preach administer the Sacraments hear confessions absolve c. in any place where they please and to have their Coadjutors both spiritual as Priests and Temporal as Cooks Bakers Caterers Butlers c. on whom the Iesuites professed can conferr sacred orders The Iesuites have this priviledge also to change their General and he power to send them whither he pleaseth and call them back again without asking leave of the Pope They may also absolve all Hereticks confessing and the General may excommunicate and imprison Delinquents They are exempted from the secular power and from all Taxes and Tithes they may carry with them moveable Altars when they travel and may disguise themselves into any habit he that visits a Iesuites House or Colledge shall have a plenary indulgence They have also power to exercise all Episcopal Functions namely to ordain anoint exorcise confirm consecrate dispense c. All these privledges were given to them by Paul the third in several Bulls Pope Iulius the third Pauls successor gave them a priviledge to erect Universities where they pleased and to conferr what degrees they will to dispense also with fasting and prohibited meats Pope Pius the fourth confirmeth all the former priviledges Pius the fifth grants that such Iesuites as forsake their order by leave from the Pope or General shall enter into no other order except the Carthusian if they apostatise without leave they shall be excommunicate he gives them also power to read publickly in any University they come to without asking leave and that none must hinder them but all are bound to hear them Gregory the thirteenth gave them power to have their Conse●vators Iudges and Advocates and to recite their Canonical hours without the Quire and to correct change interpret expunge and burn such books as they dislike and to be the Popes Library keepers and exempteth them from being necessarily present at Processions or Funerals By reason of these and other priviledges granted to this order besides their own industry they grew so numerous in the space of 75. years that they had Anno 1608. as Ribadene●a sheweth 293. Colledges besides 123. Houses and of their Society were reckoned 10581. Out of their Colledges they raise a reven●e of Twenty hundred thousand Crowns yearly Q. 8. Are there no other orders in the Church of Rome A. There are divers more but of lesse note whose original is uncertain both in respect of their Author and time besides there be many subdivisions of one and the same order as the Franciscans are subdivided into Observantes C●nventuales Minimi Capuci●l Collectanei whose charge was to receive the money that is given them Amadeani Reformati de Evangelio Chiacini cum barba de Portiuncula Paulini Bosiani Gaudentes de Augustinis with their open shooes Servientes All these differ little except in some smal matters There be also some Monks called Ambrosiani who wear red cloaks over white coats Others are called Capellani whose garments are partly black and partly blew Chal●meriani wear a white crosse upon a white cloak Cellarii from their Cells are so called and Brothers of mercy from visiting the sick and carrying the dead to the grave in the inside they wear black linnen on the outside a sooty colour garment Clavigeri wear upon a black cowle two keys intimating by this that they have power to open and shut Heaven They make Saint Peter the Author of their order Cruciferi these bow their bodies and heads as they walk go bare-foot and wear a white cloak girt with a rope they carry always in their hands a little wooden crosse The Brothers of the Crosse wear a black cloak without a hood and bear the Crosse before their breast For●●ciferi so called from wear●ng a pair of sheers on their cloak by which they shew that they clip off all carnall lusts as it were with a pair of sheers They wear a black cloak and hood these we may call Sheet-Brothers The Brothers of Helen brag that they were instituted by Helen Constantin's Mother after she had found out the Crosse they wear a white garment and on it a yellow Cross Hospitalarii so called from looking to Hospitals they wear black they differ from the former of this name and so do the Cruciferi The Brothers of Saint Iames wear a fandy-coloured garment and shells hanging at it they make Saint Iames their Patron The Order of Ignorance These Monks think it mans chief happinesse to know nothing This order of Ignorance is now the greatest in the world and is like to swallow up all the Orders and Degrees of Learning as Pharao's lean Kine did devour the fat So much the more happy will this Order be when it is fed with Tythes and Colledges There is an order of Ioannites differing from the former these wear a read garment to represent Christs Blood and on the breast thereof is woven a Chalice to shew that in his Blood our sins are washed they also hold a Book still in their hand The order of the Valley of Iosaphat goeth in a Purple ●arment these appoint Judges to decide controversies of marriage The order of Ioseph was erected in honour of Maries supposed Husband These wear ash-coloured cloathes and a white hood The order of Lazarus or Magdalen wear a green crosse upon a black cloak with a hood there be two sorts of them some contemplative who are black within and white without using ordinary food the others wear a brown or ●awny colour and are active their food is onely herbs and roots The order of Nuns of Saint Mary de decem virtutibus that is Of the ten vertues which consist onely in repeating the Ave Mary ten times They wear a black Vaile a white Coat a red Scapular and an ash-coloured cloak There be two other orders of Saint Mary the one wears a white coat and a black cloak like Carmelites the other are all white there is also the order of Maries Conception The order called Reclusi shut themselves up between two walls or in narrow cells whence they never go out so long as they live The order of Saint Ruffus instituted by him these go like the Canon Regulars wearing a Scapular over a linnen Surplesse and a black coloured hood There is an order of free Nums who maintain themselves and may marry when they will The order of Speculari● are so called from their looking glasses which they always carry their inward garment is black their outward white They wear on their breast a black crosse Among the Romans it was counted an Effeminate trick for men to carry about a Looking glasse therefore Otho is mocked by Juvenal who speaking of the Looking glasse calls it Pathic●ge●t amen Othonis The order of the S●ellati wore Stars on their cloathes some of them have black gownes and black hoods some have cloaks without hoods Some other perty orders there are of small
lyable to be censered as a brother Hence King Vzziah was excommunicate by the Priest Azariah and Theod●sius the Emperor by Ambrose Q. Will it follow that there must be no excommunication because Christ will not have the Tares plucked up till the Harvest A. 1. No for Christ speaketh there of Hypoc●its which cannot be plucked up by the Church because she knoweth them not but in the great Harvest they shall be pluckt up by the Angels at his command who knows the secrets of the heart 2. If the place be meant of Hereticks they are not to be plucked up at such times as may endanger the Churches peace but they must be left to a convenient time when the Church may excommunicate them without danger or else left to the judgement of the great day 3. All Tares cannot be pluckt up whilest the Church is here Militant for there will be found still some Tares amongst the Corn some Goats among the Sheep a Iudas among the Apostles as there were Cananites and Iebusites among the Israelites 4. Christ by this condemns their rashnesse who presently go to pluck up and flye to excommunication before they use reproofe and admonition Q. Can the Minister exclude any man from the Kingdome of God A. 1. He cannot by his own power but by the power of him whose Minister he is 2. He cannot exclude any man from Heaven but he can pronounce and declare that such a man is excluded thence Q. Can the delivering of a man over to Satan be a means to save his spirit A. Yes accidentally for God can draw good out of evil and light out of darknesse thus the bufferings which Paul suffered by the Angel of Satan caused him to pray heartily it is the special work of Gods mercy to save our souls by affliction and misery Q. Can an excommunicate person be accounted as a Brother A. Yes for excommunication takes not away true Brotherly love and affection an excommunicate person may be shut out of Heaven but not out of hope we may exclude him out of our Society but not of our ●owels of compassion and mercy we draw the Sword of excommunication against him not to kill but to cure him Who would be more fully resolved of these Presbyterian Tenets let him read their own writings Q. How many Erroneous opinions in Religion have been lately revived or hatched since the fall of our Church government A. It were almost endlesse to number every particular it may suffice that I shall name more then one hundred of the most ordinary and latest received of them which are 1. That the Scriptures are a humane invention insufficient and uncertain and do not contain half of his revealed will 2. That they are all allegoricall and written according to the private spirit of the pen-men and not as moved by the Holy Ghost And that the Old Testament is now of no force 3. That reason is the rule of faith 4. That Scripture binds us no further then the Spirit assureth us that such is Scripture 5. That Scripture should not be read to a mixt Congregation without present exposition 6. That God is the Author of the pravity and sinfulnesse of mens actions 7. That Turks Jewes Pagans and others are not to be forced from their opinions 8. That God loves a crawling worme as well as a holy Saint 9. That Gods will not sin is the cause of mans damnation 10. That man was a living 〈◊〉 before God breathed into him and that which God breathed was a part of his divine essence 11. That God is the onely Spirit and that Prince of the aire who ruleth in the children of disobedience 12. That the soul dieth with the body 13. That reprobation cannot be proved out of Scripture 14. That there is no Trinity of persons in God 15. That every creature is God as every drop in the River is water 16. That Christ is not essentially but nominally God 17. That Christ was polluted with original sin 18. That Christ was true man when he created the world yet without flesh 19. That Christ died onely for sinners and not for unbelievers for sins past before our conversion but not for sins done after conversion 20. That no man is damned but for unbeliefe and that man can satisfie for his own unbeliefe 21. That Heathens have the knowledge of Christ by the Sun Moon and Stars 22. That the end of Christs comming was to preach Gods love to us and not to procure it for us therefore did not obtain life for the Elect but a resurrection only and deliverance us from death temporal 23. That Christ preached not the Gospel but the Law for the Gospel was taught by his Apostles 24. That our unction is all one with Christs Divinity 25. That Christ with the Church of Jewes and Gentiles shall reigne one Earth a 1000 years in carnall pleasures 26. That the Heathens are saved without Christ. 27. That the Spirit of God neither dwells nor works in any but it is our own spirit which both works in the children of disobedience and sanctifies the Elect. 28. That God seeth no sin in his Elect. 29. That a man baptized with the Holy Ghost knows all things as God doth 30. That we may be saved without the word prayer Sacraments c. 31. That there is no inherent sanctification in believers but all is in Christ. 32. That Adam had died though he had not sinned 33. That we have no original sin nor is any man punished for Adams sin 34. That Gods Image consisteth onely in the face which Image was never lost 35. That men who know the Gospel are of themselves able to believe 36. That one man is not more spi●itual then another 37. That we have no free will not so much as in our natural estate 38. That the moral Law is of no use among Christians 39. That we are not justified by faith and that neither faith nor holinesse nor repentance are required in Christians 40. That the childe of God can no more sin then Christ himselfe can 41 That there should be no fasting days under the Gospel 42. That God doth not chastise his children for sin 43. That God loves his children as well when they sin as when they do well and therefore Abraham in denying his Wife sinned not 44. That Gods children ought not to ask pardon for their sinnes for though they have sin in the flesh they have none in the conscience 45. That the body of iniquity is the great Antichrist mentioned in Scripture 46. That men shal have other bodies given them in the resurrection and not the same they had here on Earth 47. That Heaven is empty of souls till the resurrection 48. That Infants shall not rise at all yet Beasts and Birds shall rise againe 49. That after this life there is neither Heaven nor Hell nor Devil but Hell is in this life in the terrours of conscience 50. That there is no true Ministery nor Church