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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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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
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
on Friday and in their Lent is punished with disgrace and a pecuniary Mulct 9. In divers ridiculous ceremonies acted by their Priests as pulling off the shooes which all people are tyed to do when they enter into their Temples in stretching out the hands and joyning them together in kissing the ground in lifting up the head in stopping of the ears with their fingers in praying with their faces to the South because Mecca is there in wiping their eyes with their hands in observing a Lenten Fast for one moneth in a yeer changing the moneth every yeer so that they fast one whole yeer in twelve and then they abstain from all meat and drink till the stars appear In plucking off their hairs at the end of their Fast and in painting of their nayls with a red colour 10. In Pilgrimages to Mecca in circumcision of their children in feasting at the Graves of the dead and in other such vain ceremonies Q. What Ceremonies observe they in their Pilgrimage to Mecca A. This journey is undertaken and performed every yeer and it is held so necessary that he who doth not once in his life go this Pilgrimage shall be assuredly damned whereas Paradise and remission of sins is procured to them that go it The way is long and tedious to those of Greece being six moneths journey and dangerous by reason of Arabian theeves mountains of sand with which divers are overwhelmed and want of water in those sandy and barren desarts Their chief care is to be reconciled to each other where there is any difference before they go for if they leave not behind them all grudges and quarels their Pilgrimage will do them no good they begin their journey from Cairo about three weeks after their Easter called Bairam being guarded with 200 Spachi on Dromedaries and 200 Ianizaries on Camels with eight pieces of Ordnance a rich vesture for the Prophet and a green Velvet covering wrought with gold to cover his Tomb which the Bassa delivers to the Captain of the Pilgrims The Camels that carry these Vestures are covered with cloth of gold and many small bels the night before their departure is kept with great Feasting and triumphs No man may hinder his wife from this Pilgrimage and every servant is made free that goeth it The Camel that carrieth the box with the Alcoran is covered with cloth of gold and silk the box with silk onely during the journey but with gold and Jewels at their entring into Mecca Musitians also and singers encompasse the Camel and much vain Pompe is used in this Pilgrimage They use divers washings by the way when they meet with water When they come to Mecca the house of Abraham which they fable was miraculously built receiveth a new covering and a new Gate the old vesture is sold to Pilgrims which hath a vertue in it to pardon sins after many idle Ceremonies performed they go round about Abrahams house seven times then they kisse a black stone which they believe fell down thither from Heaven at first it was white but by the often kissing of sinners it is become black then they wash themselves in the Pond Zunzun without the Gate five paces this pond the Angel shewed to Hagar when she wanted water for Ismael Of this also they drink and pray for pardon of their sins After five days abode at Mecca they go to the Hill of pard●ns 15 miles distant and there they leave all their sins behind them after they have heard a Sermon and prayed and offered Sacrifices Upon their return they must not look back to the Hill lest their sins follow them From hence they repair to Medina where Mahomets Sepulchre is thought to be but by the way they run up a certain hill which they call the mount of health they run that they may sweat out all their sins Thence they come pure to the Seducers tombe which notwithstanding they may not see being hanged about with a Silk Curtain which by the Eunuchs being 50. in number to attend on the tombe and to light the Lamps is taken down when the Pilgrims Captain presenteth the new one without each man gives to the Eunuchs handkerchiefs or such like to touch the tombe therewith this they keep as a special Relique When they return to Egypt the Captain presenteth the Alcoran to the Bassa to kisse and then it is laid up again the Captain is Feasted and presented with a Garment of cloth of Gold They used to cut in pieces the Camel with his Furniture which carried the Alcoran and reserve these pieces for holy Reliques The Alcoran also is elevated that all might see and adore it which done every one with joy returns to his one home Q. What Ceremonies use they about their Circumcision A. They are Circumcised about eight years of age the Child is carried on hors-back with a Tullipant on his head to the Temple with a torch before him on a spear deckt with flowers which is left with the Priest as his Fee who first nippeth the end of the skin of the childs yard with pincers to mortifie it then with his sizzers he nimbly cuts it off presently a powder is laid on to ease the pain and afterward salt The childs hands being loosed looketh as he is taught by the Priest towards heaven and lifting up the first finger of his right hand saith these words God is one God and Mahomet in his Prophet Then he is carried home in state after some prayers and offerings at the Church Sometimes the child is circumcised at home and receiveth his name not then but when he is born They feast then commonly three days which ended the child is carried with Pomp to the Bath and from thence home where he is presented with divers gifts from his Parents Friends Women are not circumcised but are tied to make profession of their Mahumetan faith Q. What Rites doe they observe about the sick and dead A. Their Priests and chief friends visit them exhort them to repentance and read Psalms to them When any dieth the Priest compasseth the Corps with a string of beads made of Lignum Aloes praying God to have mercy on him then the Priests carry it into the Garden wash it and cover it with its own garments with flowers also and persumes and his Turband is set on his head Women perform this office to the body of a woman This done the body is carried to the Temple with the head forwards and set down at the Church-door whilst the Priests are performing their service then it is carried to the burial-place without the City the Priests pray for his soul are paid for their pains and feasted at home Some part of their good cheer is set on the grave for the soul to feed on or for alms to the poor They believe there are two Angels who with angry looks and flaming firebrands examine the dead party of his former life whom they whip with
Anthropomorphites and the Manichees They rejected the Books o● Moses made God with a humane shape taught that the world was made by evil Angels and that Micha●l 〈◊〉 Arch-angel was incarnate They condemned Image worship and despised the crosse because Christ died on it They held the churches baptism to be the baptism of Iohn but their own to be the true baptism of Christ they slighted the Church Liturgy and taught there was no other Resurrection but from sin by repentance they held also that men might dissemble in Religion At Antwerp one Taudenius or Tanchelinus being a Lay-man under took a Reformation● teaching that men were justified and saved by faith onely that there was no difference between Priests and Lay-men that the Eucharist was of no use and that promiscuous copulation was lawful The Petrobruss●ans so called from Peter de Bruis of Antwerp held that baptism was needlesse to Infants and likewise churches were uselesse that crosses should be broken that Christ was not really in the Eucharist and that prayers for the dead were fruitlesse One Peter Aballard taught that God was of a compounded Essence that he was not the author of all goodnesse that he was not onely eternal that the Angels helped him to create the world that power was the property of the Father Wisdom of the Son Goodnesse of the holy Spir●● He denied that Christ took our flesh to save sinners or that the feare of God was in him he said that the holy Ghost was the soul of the world that man had no 〈◊〉 will that all things even God himselfe were subject to necessity that the Saints do not see God that in the life to come there should be no feare of God and that wee are in matters of faith to be directed by our reason His chief disciple was Arnoldus Brixienfis who denied also temporalties to the Clergy Gilbert Porr●●anus Bishop of Poytires taught that the Divine Essen●● was not God that the Proprieties and Persons in the Trinity were not the same that the Divinity was not incarnate in the Son He rejected also merits and lessened the efficacy of baptism The Henricians so called from one Henry of Tholouse a Monk and somented by Henry the Emperor taught the same Doctrines that Peter de Bruis did and withal that the church musick was a mocking of God The Patareni taught ●lso the same things The Apostolici so named from saying they were Apostles immediatly sent from God despised marriage all meats made of Milk the baptising of Infants purgatory prayers for the dead invocation of Saints and all Oaths They held themselves to be the onely true Church One Eudon gave himself out to be the judge of the quick and dead The Adamites started up again in Bohemia The Waldenses so called from Waldo of Lions who having distributed his wealth professed poverty he rejected images prayers to Saints Holy days Churches Oyl in Baptisme confirmation the Ave Mary au●icular confession indulgences purgator prayers for the dead obedience to Prelates distinction of Bishop and Priest Church Canons merit religious orders extream unction miracles exorcisms Church musick canonical hours and divers other Tene●● of the Church of Rome They held that Lay-men might preach and consecrate the Bread and that all ground was alike holy They rejected all prayers except the Lords prayer and held that the Eucharist consecrated on the Friday had more efficacy then on any other day That Priests and Deacons falling into sin lost their power in consecrating and Magistrates in governing if they fel. That the Clergy should possesse no tempor●lties that the Church failed in Pope Sylvesters time They rejected the Apostles creed and all oaths but ●ermitted promiscuous copulation and taught 〈…〉 man ought to suffer death by the sentence of any Judge Q. 5 What were the Albigenses and what other Sects were there in this twelfth Century A. These not long after the Waldenses swarmed in the Province of Tolouse and were overthrown by Simon Earl of Montferrat these taught that they were not bound to make prosession of their faith they denyed p●rgatory prayers for the dead the real presence private confession images bells in Churches and condemned the eating of flesh egges and milk The Romish writers affirm that they held two Gods that our bodies were made by Satan that the Scriptures were erroneous all oaths unlawful and Baptisme needlesse They rejected the old Testament and marriage and prayers in the Church they held there were two Christs a good born in an unknown Land and a bad born in Bethlehem of Iudea That God had two Wives of which he begot Sons and Daughters and more such stu●● as may be seen in the above named authors The Cor●erij held the Petrobrussian Tenets and withall that the Virgin Mary was an Angel that Christs body was not glorified in Heaven but did putrifie as other dead bodies and so should remain after the day of judgement● They taught also that the souls should not be glorified till the Resurrection Ioachimus Abbas taught that in the Trinity the Essence generated the Essence which opinion was condemned in the general Councel of Lateran under Innocent the third not long after started up Petrus Iohannis who maintained the errour of Ioachimus and withal taught that the reasonable soul was not the form of man that the Apostles preached the Gospel after the literal not after the spiritual sense that grace was not conferred in baptisme that Christs side was pierced with a Lance whilest he was yet alive which is directly against the words of Saint Iohn therefore this opinion was condemned in the councel of Vienna he held also Rome to be Babylon and the Pope to be Antichrist Q. 6. What opinions in Religion were professed the ●●●teenth Century A. Almaricus a Doctor in Paris taught that if Ad●m had not sinned there had been no procreation nor distinction of Sex This was condemned in the councel of Lateran under Innocent the third He held that the Saints do no wayes see God in himselfe but in his creatures He denyed the Resurrection Paradise and Hell also the real presence invocation of Saints Images and Altars He said that in the Divine minde might be created Ideas He transformed the mind of a ●ontemplative man into the Essence of God and taught that charity made sin to be no sin David Dinantius taught that the first Matter was God which was to make God a part and the meanest part of all his creatures Gulielmus de sancto amore taught that no Monks ought to live by alms but by their own labours and that voluntary poverty was unlawful the same doctrine was taught by Desider●us Longobardus affirming it a pernicious opinion that men should leaue all for Christ. Raymundus Lullius taught that in God were different Essences that God the Father was before the Son that the holy Ghost was conceived of the Father and the Son 〈◊〉 the Doctrine of the Church is that he proceeds
of Christ upon the Earth 51. That none are damned but for rejecting the Gospel 52. That now many Christians have more knowledge then the Apostles had 53. That miracles necessarily attend the Ministry 54 That there ought to be no Churches built nor should men worship in consecrated places 55. That the Apostles were ignorant of the salvation to be revealed in the last days 56. That all men ought to have liberty of conscience and of prophesying even women also 57. That circumcision and the old covenant was onely of things temporal 58. That Paedobaptisme is unlawful and impious and that others besides Ministers may baptise and that a man may be baptised often 59. That the people should receive the Lords Supper with their hats on but the Ministers in giving it should be uncovered 60. That the Church of England is Antichristian 61. That there is no divine right to call or make Ministers that Ministers should work for their living and that Tythes are Antichristian 62 ●hat Christians are not bound to observe the Lord● day and that we should observe still the old Sabbath 63. That humane learning and premeditation is uselesse to preaching and that preaching should onely confist in disputing reasoning and conferring 64. That the Saints must not joyn in prayer with wicked men not receive the Sacrament with them nor with any member of the Church of England 65. That ●ublick prayers are not to be used but by such as have an in●allible Spirit as the Apostles had 66. That set hours of prayer are needlesse 67 That singing of Davids Psalmes or other holy songs except they be of their own making are unlawful 68. That wicked men ought not to pray at all 69. That all government in the Church ought to be civil not Ecclesiastical 70 That the power of the keyes is as well in six or seven gathered together as in the greatest congregation 71. That neither miracles nor visions nor anointing the sick with oyl are ceased 72. That in these days many are with Paul rapt up into the third Heaven 73 That the Magistrate is not to meddle with matters of Religion nor forms of Church government which if they do they are not to be obeyed 74. That there ought to be a community of Goods seeing all the Earth is the Saints 75. That a man upon slight causes may put away his wife and that one man may have two wives 76. That children ought not at all to obey their parents if wicked 77. That parents should not instruct their children but leave them to God 78. That Christians ought not to maintain Religion by the sword nor to fight for their lives and liberties no● to fight at all nor to kil any thing nay not a chicken for our use 79. That it stands not with Gods goodness to damn his own creatures eternally 80. That i'ts unlawful for a Christian to be a Magistrate 81. That man lost no more by Adams fall then the rest of the whole creation 82 That Christ hath not purchased eternal life for man more then for the rest of the creation and that he offered up himselfe a full and perfect sacrifice not only for man but for all that man kept even the whole creation 83. None are sent to hell before the last judgment 84. It is not the Law but the Gospel which threatens us with Hell fire 85. If God shew not mercy to all he is not infinite 86. Christians are not bound to meet one day in seven for publick worship 87. The Saints are justified not by Christs obedience but by the essential righteousness of God 88. A woman committeth not adultery in lying with another man if her husband be a sleep 89. That the Saints may put away their unbeleeving wives or husbands 90. There is no other seale but the Spirit the Sacraments are no seales at all 91. The Magistrate may not put to death a murtherer being a member of the Church till first he be cast out of the Church 92. The promises belong to sinners as sinners and not as repenting sinners 93. Apocrypha books are canonical Scripture 94. To use set forms of prayer even the Lords prayer is Idolatry 95. Bells Churches and Church-yards preaching in Pulpits in Gowns by an hour-glasse the names of our months and days are all idolatry 96. That the Apostles Creed is to be rejected as erroneous 97. That there ought to be no other laws among Christians but the judicial Law of Moses and that the Magistrate hath no legislative power at all 98. That all Learning Schools Universities Arts Degrees are to be rejected as pernicious 99. That Angels and Devils are not substances but meer qualities and that mens soules are but terrestrial vapours perishing with the bodies 100. That some in this life are perfect without all sin and need not pray for pardon 101. That in God there is some composition and corporiety and mutability also 102. That Christ took not his flesh of the Virgin Mary but that his body was created without all consanguinity with the first Adam 103. That God doth personally subsist in every creature 104. That the world is eternal 105. That the Lords Supper may be celebrated in Inns rather then Churches and that in the end of a feast 106. That the Devils have no sinne But I will leave these Divels though I could mention many more but that it delights not my selfe nor can it the Reader to be raking in such filthy mire and dirt These are some of the poysonous weeds which have too much of late infested our English Garden I mean the Church once admired both at home and abroad for the beauty of her Doctrine and Disciplin and envied of none but ignorants or men of perverse minds The Poet bewailing the ruins of Troy said Seges ubi Troi a fuit Corn grows where Troy stood but I may sadly complain that in stead of corn that is sound and wholsom doctrine which should be the food of our souls now grows Tares and Weeds that choak the good word with which we were formerly fed and might have been unto a life of glory everlasting if we had therein abode But least I should bring thee into danger by giving thee onely a fight of these Rocks and Precepices to prevent that I shall commend to thy serious perusal Master Wollebius his Abridgement of Christian Divinity which for the good of my country men I Englished Enlarged and cleared in obscure places and have now fitted for a second impression A book worthy to be written in Letters of gold and imprinted in the heart of every good Christian The knowledge therein contained by prayer and through the assistance of Gods spirit will root and establish the in every good word and work to the comming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ which God of his infini●e mercy grant The Contents of the Thirteenth Section The Doctrine of the Church of Rome concerning the Scriptures 2. Their tenets concerning predestination
take it down whilest it was movable they were distinguished according to Levies three sons into the Gershonites Cohathites and Merarites the first carried the hangings and coverings The second the chief things of the Sanctuary the third had the charge of the wood-work In Davids time some were Judges some Treasurers some Singers and some Porters 1 Chron. 23. 26. The Singers and Porters were divided into 24. order● 1 Chron. 25. 26. The elder Levites were to oversee and teach the younger Who from the thirtieth year of their life till the fiftieth did bear about the Tabernacle Under them were the Gibeonites or Nethinims whose office was to draw water and hew wood for the house of God Q. What were the Prophets Scribes and Pharises A. Not only were they called Prophets to whom God revealed himself and his purposes in an extraordinary way but those also that expounded the Scripture they were also called Fathers Doctors of the Law Disputers Wise men and Rabbies from their greatness in knowledge Which title the Pharisees did appropriate to themselves their Scholars were called children and sons of the Prophets The name of Scribes was given to Scriveners and publick Notaries these were called Scribes of the people Mat. 2. 4. and likewise those that did write and expound the Law such a Scribe was Esdras Esdr. 7. 6. these were called Doctors of the Law The Pharisees were so called from separation and by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Sepa●●rists for they separated themselves to a strict kind of life and to the study of the Law having no commerce with other people nor communicating with them in dyet apparrel nor customs They held a fatal necessity with the Stoicks and transammation with the Pychagoreans hence they thought that either the soul of Iohn Baptist or of Elias or of Ieremy had animated Christs body They preferred Traditions to the written Word and placed most of their holiness in washing counting it a less sin to commit fornication then to eat with unwashed hands from their daily washings they were named Hemero-Baptists they always washed when they returned from the market thinking themselves polluted with the touch of other people They are noted Mat. 9. 11. for holding it unlawful to eat with sinners and Mark 7. 4. for their superstitious washing of cups pots brazen vessels and tables and Luke 18. 12. for fasting twice in the week and Mat 23. 5. for their broad Phylacteries which were scrolls of partchment wherein the law was written so called from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep or reserve for by these they kept the Law in their memory they are noted also for their large borders and fringes Mat. 23. 5. they wore their Phylacteries on their foreheads and left arms and Hierom observeth in Matth. 23. that they used sharp thorns in their fringes that by the pricking thereof they might be put in minde of the commandements Q. What were the Nazarites Rechabites and Essenes A. The Nazarites were votaries Numb 6. so called from Nazar to separate for they separated themselves from wine and strong drink from coming neer the dead and from the rasor some were Nazarites for their life as Sampson Iohn Baptist c. others only for a time to wit thirty days as Absolom who cut his hair the thirtieth day of his vow such a Nazarite was Paul Act. 21. 24. Nazareth was a village in Galilee where Christ was conceived and bread and therefore was called a Nazarite Mat. 2. 23. and his Disciples Nazarites Acts 24. 5. but indeed he was the onely true Nazarite because he was pure holy and separate from sinners but he was no legal Nazarite for he drunk wine and went neer the dead These Hereticks were also called Nazarites who taught that with the Gospel should be joyned the Law of Moses Acts. 15. 2. Of the Rechabites so called from Rechab their Father We read Ierem. 35. 2 3 4 c. these neither drunk wine nor lowed seed nor built houses nor planted vineyards but like strangers lived all their days in Tents The Essenes so called from their skill in curing of diseases for they were much given to the study of Physick in their opinions were Pythagoreans ascribing all things to fate offering no sacrifices but of inanimate things shunning oathes pleasures and wine contenting themselves with water only and mean apparrel their garments were white and had all things in common amongst them They worshipped towards the East observed the Sabbath more strictly then others kept seven Pentecosts every year to wit every seventh week one and generally they abstained from marriage yet some did marry for procreation They were superstitious in preserving the names of Angels they were much given to silence with the Pythagoreans chiefly at table none were admitted into their Society without four years probation there were some of these Essenes contemplative only and lived in gardens or remote villages who contented themselves with bread and salt others were active and gave themselves to manual labours these lived in Cities and fared better and eat twice a day Q. What were the Sadducees and Samaritans A. The Sadduces were so called either from Isedek justice because they would be accounted the onely just men in the world or from Sadock the Author of their Sect who was the scholar of Antigonus Socheus these rejected all Traditions and Scriptures except the five books of Moses denied the Resurrection paines or rewards after this life Angels and spirits fate likewise or destiny ascribing all to mans freewill They held also that the soul died and perished with the body The Samaritans held with the Sadduces that there was no Scripture but the Pentateuch that there was no Resurrection nor life Eternal nor any Traditions to be admitted yet they dissented from the Sadduces in acknowledgeing Angels in worshipping only upon mount Garizim whereas the Sadduces worshipped also in Ierusalem and kept faire correspondency with the other Jewes whereas the Samaritans and Jewes did so hate and abhor each other that there was no commerce between them but did curse and excommunicate each other Of these Jewish Sects see Iesephus Philo Drusius de trib Sect. Munster Sigonius Buxtorsius and others Q. How did they anciently observe their S●bbath A. The day before was the preparation of the Sabbath called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which began about the sixth hour that is our twelfth That day they might not travel above twelve miles least by comming home too late they might want time for preparation to the Sabbath which began in the evening and which for the excellency thereof was called the Queen of Feasts and gave denomination to the whole week on the Sabbath they must not travel above two thousand paces or cubits for so far was the distance of the Ark from the Camp They were so superstitious in the keeping of their Sabbath that they would not fight that day and so suffered Ierusalem
is yet to come therfore must make both confession of their faith and of their s●●s They pray that their death may be a sufficient expiation for their sins and that they may have a share in Paradise and in the life to come Q. How do they use their dead A. When the Party dieth his kindred tear off a little piece of their garments because Iacob tore his garments when he heard of Iosephs death They mourn also seven days because Ioseph did so for his father All the water in the house they pour out into the streets They cover his face and bow his thumb that it resembleth the Hebrew Shaddai that so they may terrifie Satan from comming near the Corps His other fingers are stretched out to shew that now he holds the world no longer having forsaken it They wash the body with warm water and anoint the head with wine and the yolk of an egg and cloath him with the white surplice he wore on the day of Reconciliation and then they Coffin him When the Corps is carried out of the house they cast a shell after him signifying that all sorrow should be now cast out of that house In the Church yard a prayer or two is said then the Corps is buried the next of kin casteth in the first earth In their return they cast grasse over their heads either to signifie their frailty and mortality For all flesh is grass or else their hope of the Resurrection When they enter the Synagogue they skip to and fro and change their seat seven times The Mourners go bare-foot seven days abstain from wine and flesh except on Sabbaths and Festivals They bath not in 33. days nor pare their nails They burn candles for seven days together thinking that the departed souls return to the place where they left the body and bewail the losse thereof They beleeve that no Jew can be partaker of the Resurrection who is buried out of Canaan except God through hollow passages of the earth convey his body thither grounding this conceit upon Iacobs desire to Ioseph that he should bury him in Canaan and not in Egypt They borrowed diverse Gentile customs in their Funerals as cutting or tearing their skin hiring of women to sing and minstrils to play also shaving going bare footed and bare-headed with dust on their heads washing anointing and embalming besides beautifying of their Sepulchres and adding of Epitaphs c. they used also burning of the dead as may be seen in 1 Sam. 31. 12. and Amos 6. 10. they bury apart by themselves and not with those of another Religion Their common Epitaph is Let his soul be in the bundle of life with the rest of the just Amen Amen Selah Other vain opinions and ceremonies they have but not to our purpose Of which see Munster Buxt●rfius Margarita Galatin Hospinian Fagius D. Kimchi Aben Esra c. The Contents of the second Section The Religions of the ancient Babylonians of the making worshipping of images and bringing in Idolatry 2. Of Hierapolis and gods of the Syrians 3. Of the Phenicians 4. Of the old Arabians 5. Of the ancient Persians 6. Of the Scythians 7. Of the Tartars or Cathaians and Pagans 8. The Religions of the Northern Countries neer the Pole Three-ways whereby Satan deludes men by false miracles The fear of his Stratagems whence it proceeds His illusions many our duty thereupon 9. Of the Chinois 10. Of the ancient Indians 11. Of Siam 12. Of Pegu. 13. Of Bengala 14. Of Magor 15. Of Cambaia 16. Of Goa 17. Of Malabar Pagan Idolaters believe the immortality of the Soul 18. Of Narsinga and Bisnagar 19. Of Japan 20. Of the Philippina Islands 21. Of Sumatra and Zeilan 22. Of the ancient Egyptians 23. Of the modern Egyptian Religions SECT II. Quest. WHat kinde of Religious or rather Superstitious government was there among the Ancient Babylonians Answ. They had their Priests called Chaldeans and Magi who were much addicted to Astrology a●d Divination and had their Schools for education of the Youth in this knowledge They worshipped divers gods or idols rather the two chief were Belus or Bel or Baal by whom they meant Iupiter the other was Astaroth or Astarte by which Iuno was understood They were bound also by their superstitious discipline to worship the Sun and so was the King to offer to him every day a white horse richly furnished They worshipped also the Fire under the name of Nego and and the Earth by the name of Shaca To this Goddesse they kept a feast for five dayes in Babylon where during that time the Servants were Masters and the Masters Servants They worshipped also Venus for maintaining of whose service the women prostituted themselves to strangers and received much money thereby to this purpose they sat and exposed themselves at the Temple of Venus which they call Militta Their Priests used to have their Processions and to carry their Idols on their shoulders the people before and behinde worshipping The Priests also there used to shave their heads and beards and to stand in their Temple with Axes Scepters and other Weapons in their hands and Candles lighted before them They held a Divine Providence but denied the Creation Ninus was the first Idolater who after the death of his Father Belus set up his Image and caused it to be adored with divine honours here at Babylon and in the rest of his dominions Thus we see that the making of images and the worshipping of them was the invention of the Gentiles for indeed they were men whom the Pagans affirmed to be gods and every one according to his merits and magnificence began after his death to be worshipped by his friends but at length by the perswasion of evil spirits they esteemed those whose memories they honoured to be lesser gods this opinion and idolatry was fomented by the Poets and not onely a preposterous love and a vain admiration of the worth and merits of dead men brought in idolatry but likewise Deisidemonia or a foolish and preposterous fear primus in orbe Deos fecit timor for the Gentiles did fear their Religion would be in vain if they did not see that which they worshipped they would therefore rather worship stocks and stones then an invisible Deity but it is ridiculous saith Seneca Gen● posito simulachra adorare suspicere fabros vero qui illa secerunt contemnere to worship and admire the image and to slight the image maker whereas the Artificer deserves more honour then the Art Against this madnesse the Prophet Isaiah speaketh chap. 44. men cut down trees rinde them burn a part of them make ready their meat and warm themselves by the fire thereof but of the residue he maketh a god an idol and prayeth to it but God hath shut their eyes from sight and their heart from understanding Divers ways they had in worshipping of their Idols sometimes by bowing the head sometimes by bending the knee
man was not created by chance but by a supream power Seneca Macrobius Virgil Ovid and other Latine Poets except Lucretius affirm the same Doctrine The Stoicks also asserted the original of the world and so did the Epicures though these held a beginning fortuital not providential ascribing the original of things to chance not to counsel This same doctrine of the creation is at this day beleeved by Turks Arabians Persians Armenians the most barbarous people of both Indies as we may see in the progresse of this Book and the greatest opponents to this doctrine of the worlds creation as Pliny Lucretius Galen and others are forced sometimes to doubt the truth of their own Tenets Q Were all the Tartars of one Religion or Discipline A. No For that vast Country containeth several Nations who were and some of them yet are of several Religions Some Christians some Mahumetans and others Pagans among whom also are divers Sects and Religions In Sachion they have divers Monasteries of Idols to whom they dedicate their children and on festival days sacrifice Rams to these Idols for their childrens preservation the flesh whereof they eat● but reserve the bones as holy reliques the Priests Fee is the skin with the head feet and inwards and some part of the flesh also Before the Corps of any great man be buried they set a table before it furnished with all sort of meats with the odour of which they think the departed soul is refreshed and heartned against the burning of the body They cast into the fire with the body pictures of his men women horses and other things to serve him in the other world In Tangoth they worship Idols with many heads and hands they have Monasteries where the Monks are walled up In Succuir they make perfumes of Rheubarb for their Idols In Caindu they prostitute their wives sisters and daughters to strangers as an honour due to their Idols In Cathai and Mangi the sick vow to offer their blood to their Idols if they recover their Sorcerers also cause them to offer to these Idols sacrifices of Rams with black heads which with spiced drinks they eat up merrily with singing and dancing and fling the broth of the sacrifice in the air In some Provinces of Cathaia the Monks wear strings about them full of nut shells on which they are still praying they worship still towards the north but keep their Church doors open towards the south Of these see Paulus Venetus and Will de Rubruquis who both travelled in these Countries Q. Of what Religion are the Northern countries neer the Pole A In Nova Zembla as the Hollanders who travelled thither relate there is no Religion prescribed by Law but they worship the Sun so long as he is with them and in his absence the Moon and north Star To these they offer yearly sacrifices of Deer which they burn except the head and feet they sacrifice also for their dead The Samodyes which are subject to the Muscovit are much addicted to witchcraft and idolatry among them each kindred have their Temple where they sacrifice their Priest is he that is eldest whose ornaments are small ribs and teeth of fishes and wilde beasts hanging about him with a white Garland on his head in his divine service he doth not sing but howse and that so long till he become like a mad man and then falls down as if he were dead but riseth again or dereth five Deere to be sacrificed and then thrusts a sword half way into his belly still singing or howling rather the sword he takes out again heats it in the fire and then thrusts it in at the Navel and out at the Fundament then he lets two men standing by him pull off his head and left shoulder with a small line by which they pull the head and shoulder into a kettle of hot water but he reviveth again and cometh out whole as he was before with such jugling illusions do they deceive the people But of these see Richard Iohnsons relation in Hakluit tom 1. Q. How many ways can Satan delude men by such false miracles A. Three wayes 1. By local motion suddenly removing one object from the eye and substituting in stead thereof another thus are we deceived in many supposed transformations as when we think we see Women transformed into Cats or Hares or any other creature the Woman is suddenly conveyed away and the Cat put in her place such were these transmutations of Vlysses fellows into beasts and of Diomedes his company into birds 2. By darkning the Medium or Aire that we cannot see the object or by condensing of it so that the object appeareth bigger then it is or by altering of it so that the object appeareth quite other then it is as we see strange things through some glasses or lastly by working on and disturbing of the fancy which is no hard matter for Satan to do being a subtile spirit of long experience and full of knowledge 3. By working on the outward sensitive organ either by altering situation thereof thus by elevating or depressing the eye we see things double and otherwise then they are or by disturbing the visive spirits or by casting a mist before the eye By such tricks the Egyptian Sorcerers made the people beleeve they had done the same miracles that Moses did And so the Witch of Endor deluded Saul by presenting to him the resemblance of Samuel whereas it was not in the power of Satan to disturb the soul of any just man and to take it from that place of rest and happinesse where it is under the immediate protection of the Almighty yet many learned men are of another opinion that Samuel did truly appear God so permitting that Saul might be convinced of his wickednesse and desertion from God by the same Prophet whose counsel he had heretofore despised Now though Satan deludes oftentimes with false miracles yet I deny not but that sometimes by Gods permission he doth strange wonders by the help of natural causes as he can raise storms so he did against Iobs Children he can carry his Witches in the Aire so he did carry Christ to the pinacle of the Temple and thence to an high Mountain so the Angel carried Habakkuk he can also make beasts to speak by guiding their tongues so the Angel made Balaams Asse to utter certain words but he can do no miracle that is he cannot produce such effects as exceed the activity of natural causes so he cannot raise the dead or give them life again he cannot restore sight to the blinde where there is a total privation nor can he transform men into beasts being the body of a beast is not capable of an humane soul nor can the soul of man animate a beasts body there being no relation betweene the matter and form nor is there any disposition appetite or aptitude in that matter to receive such a form This is onely the work of God who
in the morning though a Goose or an Asse and all the day after they pray to it but a Crow they cannot abide the sight of that will make them keep in all day They salute the first appearance of the New Moon with prayers on their knees Neer to every Idol is a Cistern of water in which they that passe by wash their feet worship and offer Rice Eggs or such like When they sow mow marry go to sea and when the women lie in they feast their idols with musick and other solemnities fourteen days together and so do sea-men after they return home See Linschoten Q Of what Religion are the people of Malabar A. Pythagoreans they are holding not onely the immortality of Soules both of beasts and men and transanimation but also a divinity in Elephants Kine and other beasts therefore at Calecut the chief City of this Dominion and head of a small Kingdome of the same name there is a stately Temple of 700. pillars dedicated to the Ape Their Bramanes or Priests the successors of the old Brachmannes are in such esteeme here that the King will not converse with his new married Wife till one of the chief Bramanes hath had the first nights lodging with her They hold that God made the World but because the trouble of governing thereof is so great therefore hath given the charge thereof to Satan whom they worship with flowers on their Altars and sacrifices of Cocks The Bramanes wash his image sitting in a fiery Throne with three Crowns and four Horns in sweet water every morning The King of Calecut eats no meat till it be first offered by his Priests to this Idol Debtors that will not pay are arrested by a rod sent from the chief of the Bramanes with which a circle is made about the Debtor in the Kings name and the said Priest out of which he da●e not go till the debt be satisfied otherwise he is put to death Every twelfth year in the City of Quilacare is a Jubilee kept to the honour of their Idol in which the King of that place upon a Scaffold covered with silk before the people washeth himself then prayeth to the Idol and having cut off his nose ears lips and other parts at last cuts his own throat as a sacrifice to his idol His successor by their discipline is bound to be present and to act the same tragedy on himselfe at the next Jubilee See Castaneda Barbosa Boterus Lin●●hoten and Purchas Q. How ca●● these Idolatrous Pagans to beleeve the immortality of souls A. By the meer force of natural reason for they observed that the soul is incorporeal not onely free from al dependance on the body in respect of its essence but also in regard of its inorganical operations to wit of Understanding and Will they found that the more the body decayed and grew weak the more vigorous active and strong was the soul that it lost nothing of its operations by the losse or decay of the outward senses that it could comprehened all the world within it self that it could move it self in an instant from one end of the world to the other that it can make things past many years agoe as if they were present that it can conceive spiritual Essences and Universalities all which do prove how far the soul exceedeth the body and bodily senses which can reach no farther then to sensible qualities singularities or individuals to things present only to bodies only Besides they observed that the soul could not dye or perish or corrupt and putrifie as bodies do because it is immaterial simple without composition of different substances and free from contrary and destructive qualities which are the causes of death corruption and putrefaction in bodies Again every body is quantitative sensible and may be measured and filled but the soul hath no quantitie nor is it sensible but by its effects nor can it be measured nor can the whole world fill it nor doth it increase or decrease as bodies do nor can it receive hurt or detriment from any outward thing and whereas bodily senses are weakned by any vehement object as the eye by too much light the ear by a violent sou●d c. the soul is perfected by its object and the more sublime or eminent the object is the more is the soul corroborated in sits understanding neither is the soul subject to time and motion as bodies are for it makes all times present and is not capable of generation corruption alteration c. moreover there is in the soul even of Epicurus himself a desire of immortality which desire cannot be in vain nor frustrated because natural and consequently necessary and wee know that God hath made nothing in vain but this desire must be in vain if frustr●ted And we find that many who have denied the souls immortality in their health and prosperity have been forced to confesse it in their sicknesse and troubles and on their death bed If we look upon the writings of the learned Gentiles we shall find them professing this truth this we may see in the fragments of Zoroastres in Trismegistus in Phocillides who thus sings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is The soul is immortal and void of old age and liveth allwayes And againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is The soules remain void of fate in death The Pythagoreans believed the same as we see by their opinion of Transanimation Socrates and Plato speak most divinely of the soul essence and immortality so doth Aristotle in his books De anima so do the Poets so doth Cicero in Som. Scip. Erigamus in cae●um oculos tanquam in Patriam in quam nobis aliquando redeundum est Let us saith he lift up our eyes towards Heaven as our country to which at last we shall return So he saith The body is fraile but the spirit is immortal So Seneca Animus unde demissus est● ibi illum aeterna requies manet Eternal rest remaines for the soul there from whence it came Animus sacer aeternus cui non possit inijci manus Many such passages may be seen in his writi●gs and that generally the Gentiles believed this truth is plain by their opinion they had of torments in Hell and of joyes in their Elysian fields Q. Of what Religion are the people of Narsinga and Bisnagar A. This rich Indian Kingdom having these two names from the two Chief Cities thereof is infested with horrible Idolatry Here is an Idol to which Pilgrimes resort either with their hands bound or ropes abovt their necks or knives sticking in their armes and legs which limbs if they fester they are accounted holy Gold Silver and Jewels are given by these Pilgrims to maintain this Idol and his Temple All these gifts are cast into a Lake and kept there for the uses aforesaid This Idol is carried yearly in procession with Virgins and Musick going before Under the Idols Chariot Pilgrims
birds and their Priests are in such esteem that they think life and death plenty and famine are in their power In the Kingdome of Cong● they worship some monstrous creatures in stead of God But they were converted to Christianity by the Portugal Anno 1490. At the City of Banza afterward called Saint Saviours was erected a Cathedral Church for the Bishop who was there received by the King in great magnificence This Church had 28. Canon Residents All their Idols of beasts birds trees and herbs with their conjuring characters were burned Divers Religious persons and Jesuits were sent from Portugal thither to erect Schools and Colledges for Divinity and the Arts. See Purchas Lopez Maffaeus Osorius of the acts of Emanuel Q. What Religion do the northern neighbours of Congo professe A. In Loango under the Line they worship idols and are circumcised Every trades-man appeaseth his god with such things as belong to his trade the husbandman with corn the weaver with cloath c. At the death of their friends they kill Goats to the honour of their idols and make divers feasts in memorial of the dead They will rather dye then touch any meat which is prohibited by their Priests At Kenga the Sea-Port of Loango there is an idol kept by an old Woman which is once a year honoured with great solemnity and feasting There is another idol at Morumba thirty leagues northward where boys are sworn to serve this God and are initiated with hard diet ten days silence abstinence from certain meats and a cut in their shoulder the blood of which is sprinkled at the Idols feet Their trials of life and death are in the presence of this Idol At Anzichi they are circumcised worship the Sun and Moon and each man his particular Idol In some of these neighbouring countries the people are man-eaters and worship the Devil to whom when they offer sacrifice they continue from morning till night using charming Vociferations dancing and piping See Lopez Barros and others Q. Of what Religion are the Islands about Africa A. In some of them are Mahumetans in some Christians but in most Heathens In Socotera an Island neer the mouth of the Red Sea whence we have our best Aloes they are Iacobites and are governed by their Abuna or Priest They much reverence the Crosse. They have Altars in their Churches which they enter not but stand in the Porch In Madagascar or the great Island of Saint Laurence there are many Mahumetans upon the coast but more Idolaters within the Land who acknowledge one Creator and are circumcised but use neither to pray nor keep holy day They punish adultery and theft with death In the Isle of Saint Thomas under the Line are Christians and Moors In divers Islands are no people at all In the Canaries are Christians before they were idolaters and had many wives whom they first prostituted to their Magistrates and this uncivil civility they used to strangers instead of hospitality They bury the dead by setting them upright against a wall with a staff in their hand and if he was a great man a vessel of milk by him Madera is also possessed by Christians and so be the other Islands on this hither part of the African coast see Ortelius Mercater and other Geographers Q. What Religion was professed among the Americans A. Before the Spaniards came thither they were all Pagans who as they were distinguished into divers Nations so they worshipped divers gods after divers manners but they did generally acknowledge the Sun and Moon for the chief gods In Canada they worshipped the Devil before the French came thither and in most places there as yet they worship him who when he is offended with them flings dust in their eyes The men marry two or three wives who after the death of their husbands never marry againe but go still after in black and besmear their faces with coal dust and grease they do first expose their daughters to any that will lie with them and then give them in marriage They believe that after death their soules ascend into the Stars and go down with them under the Horizon into a Paradise of pleasure They believe also that god stuck a multitude of arrows in the beginning into the ground and of these sprung up men and women They have divers ridiculous opinions of God as that he once drank much Tobacco and then gave the pipe to their Governour with a command that he should keep it carefully and in so doing he should want nothing but he lost the Pipe and so fell into want and misery Such senselesse conceits have these people who as they are savage in their carriage so in their understandings they are little better then beasts They use to sing the Devils praises to dance about fires which they make to his honour and leap over them They bemoan the dead a great while and bring presents to the grave Many of these ignorant souls were converted to Christ by the industry of the Jesuites Anno 1637. and 1638. See Father Pauls relation of new France See also Champlain and Iaques Cartier c. Q. What is the Religion of Virginia A. Before the English planted Christianity there they worshipped the Devil and many idols as yet they doe in many places there They beleeve many Gods but one principally who made the rest and that all creatures were made of water and the Woman before the Man who by the help of one of the gods conceived and bore children They are all Anthropomorphites giving to their gods the forms of men whom they worship with praying singing and offerings They hold the soules immortality rewards and punishments after this life the one in heaven the other in a burning pit toward the west The Priests are distinguished from other people by garments of skins and their hair cut like a comb on their crowns They carry their gods about with them and ask counsel of them Much of their devotion consisteth in howling and dancing about fires with rattles of Gourd or Pompian rindes in their hands beating the ground with stones and offering of Tobacco Deer suet and blood on their stone Altars They undertake no matters of consequence without advice of their Priests the chief whereof is adorned with Feathers and Weasels tails and his face painted as ugly as the devils They bury their Kings after their bodies ate burned and dryed in white skins within arches of mats with their wealth at their feet and by the body is placed the devils Image The Women expresse their sorrow with black paint and yellings for twenty four hours None but the King and Priest may enter these houses where the Images of Devils and their Kings are kept Instead of saying Grace at meat they fling the first bit into the fire and when they will appease a storm they cast Tobacco into the water Sometimes they sacrifice children to the devil But of these passages See
Virgil Et statuam ante aras auratâ fronte iuvencum and Livie l. 5. sheweth that to Apollo was sacrificed not onely an ox with gilded hornes but also caprae albae auratae white goates with hornes gilded and Val. Flac. l. 3. Arg. speaketh of lectas auratâ fronte bidentes of sheep with gilded hornes And long afore the Romans this golden superstition was used as may be seen in Homer Iliad 3. where Nestor promiseth to sacrifice to Minerva an ox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 powring gold about his hornes Ioseph Acosta relates in his History of America what magnificent Temples and rich Images of gold and precious stones the Indians dedicated to their Idols Against all such vanities Arnobius in his Book against the Gentiles disputeth elegantly shewing that God is not taken with such toyes as Temples Altars and sacrifices but cultus verus in pectore est his true worship consisteth in the breast and as our Saviour saith neither in the Temple of Samaria nor of Ierusalem but in spirit and truth Quin damus id superis de magna quod dare lance Non possit magni Messalae lippa propago Compositum jus fasque animo sanctosque recessus Mentis incoctum generoso pectus honesto Haec cedo ut admoveam templis farre litabo An honest upright sincere and sanctified heart saith Persius is above all the Temples and sacrifices in the world Q. What Priests had they at Mexico and hat Sacrifices A. Besides their inferiour Priests they had one chief whose habit was a Crown of rich Feathers on his head Pendants of Gold with green stones at his ears and under his Lip an Azure stone his office was to receive the body of the dead King at the Temple door with a mournful song to open the breast of the sacrificed man to pull out his heart to offer it to the Sun and then to sting it to the idol to which the man was sacrificed The inferiour Priests in the interim holding the legs arms and head of the Sacrificed wretch whilst his heart was taking out They used also to ●●ay of the skins of men and cloath some therewith who went about dancing and forcing people to offer them presents or else they would strike them over the face with the bloody corner of the skin The Priests office also was to burn incense before their idols every morning noon-tide evening and at midnight for then with Trumpets and Cornets they sounded a long time which done they burned the Incense in Censers with much reverence and then they beat themselves and draw blood with sharp bodkins They did preach also on some festival days to the people The revenues of the Priests were great the Temples in state magnificence and wealth exceeded ou●s The Priests were all annointed and wore their hair long for they never cut it They did sometimes annoint themselves with an Unguent made of venemous beasts which made them without fear and armed them with cruelty They painted their skins black They washed the new born Children and let them blood in their ears they performed marriages by asking the parties mutual consent and tying together a corner of the womans vaile with a corner of the mans gown and so brought them to the Bridegrooms house causing the Bride to goe seven times about the hearth They buried the dead either in their Gardens or on Mountains sometimes they burned the body and if he was a great man they killed his Chaplain and his Officers to attend him burying also wealth with him that he might not want in the other world The Priest used to attire himself in these great Funerals like a Devil with many mouths and glasse eyes and with his staff stirred and mingled the ashes When the King died the Priests were to sing his Elogies and to sacrifice two hundred persons to serve him Adultery was punished with death and so was dishonesty in their Nuns and Monks of which there were two great Cloysters at Mexico But who will see these particulars handled at large let them read Ioseph Acosta and Lopez de Gomara Q. Had the Americans any knowledge of Christian Religion A. Concerning Christ they knew nothing some smal knowledge they had of a supream God whom they called Mirococha and of the creation of the immortality of souls of a life after this wherein are punishments and rewards and some of them as Lerius witnesseth beleeve the resurrection of the flesh and if we will beleeve Acosta they have some knowledge of the Trinity which they worship under the picture of the Sun with three heads they have some tradition likewise of Noahs flood and that all mankind was drowned except six persons who saved themselves in a cave some in Brasil beleeve all were drowned except their progen●tors who were preserved to propagate mankind The Indians also report that the Sun hid himselfe in a certain Lake within an Island during the time of the Deluge and so was preserved this is not unlike the Poetical fiction of Diana and Apollo how they were begot in the Isle Ortygia called afterward from their first appearance Delos by this intimating that after the flood by reason of thick foggs and mists arising out of the moist earth the Sun and Moon were not seen in many days but these vapours being spent and the earth dry the Moon was first seen and then in some few hours afterward the Sun The tradition which they have of the flood cannot be that of Ogyges King of Attica which happened about six hundred years after Noahs flood and which drowned only the country about Athens and Achaia in Peloponesus nor was it that of Deucalion which happened in the 82. year of his age about two hundred and fifty years after the former and seven hundred eighty two years after Noahs flood for this drowned only Thessaly and some part of Italy of which the Americans could have no knowledge seeing many places neerer never heard of these floods it is most likely then that their tradition was grounded on Noahs flood for as Noahs posterity peopled all the world so they dispersed the memory of this flood wherever they planted for we finde this deluge nor onely mentioned by Moses but also by Berosus Alexander Polyhistor Abydenus the Historian as he is cited by Eusebius Plato in Timaeo Plutarch writing of Deucalions flood speaketh of the Dove sent out of the Ark which relates to Noahs flood and Ovid describing the same flood writes according to the Mosaical description of the first and universal deluge whereas that of Deucalion was but of a particular country So Lucian de Dea Syria writes of Deucalions flood as if he had read the sixth and seventh chapters of Genesis of Noahs flood for he sheweth how all flesh had corrupted their wayes upon the earth how all their works were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 works of injustice and violence how the rain fell the fountains of the great deep were opened the waters so
leaves not his slave in death but with the terrors of future torments in hell doth vex his soul when it is departing hence Curae non ipsa in morte relinquunt there is no slave so wretched and miserable no pain so great no captivity so unpleasing no chaines so heavy no prison so loathsome which in sleep are not forgotten for then the slave is at liberty the pain is eased the chaines are light and the darkest dungeon is then a beautiful Pallace but this Deisedemonia as the Greeks call it this superstitious fear will not permit it s captivated slave to rest or take any quiet but affrights him in his sleep with horrid dreams and hideous phancies so that sleep which should be his comfort and ease becomes his tormenter Besides Temples and Altars which use to be Sanctuaries for Delinquents are no ease or sanctuary at all to the superstitious sinner any servant might be defended from his Master by laying hold of the Altar but no Altar no Temple no Sacrifice can priviledge the superstitious soul who is still jealous and fearfull of his cruel gods and what wonder is it if we consider the nature of those insatiable devils whom they worship who are never satisfied with the blood of beasts men women and children but are still thirsting after more with the horse-leech if these be the gods which the Gentiles serve surely as Plutarch saith they had been in no worse condition if the Typhones and Giants had overthrown these gods for they could not have been mo●e cruel nor have exacted more bloody victimes And doubtlesse as the same Plutarch saith these poor wretches do not love their gods but rather hate them because they still fear some hurt and mischiefe from them therefore as some men flatter and give rich presents to tyrants not because they love them for indeed they hate them but that they may not receive hurt by them so deale superstitious men with their gods And in truth Plutarch is not altogether mistaken when he makes Superstition worse then Atheisme for the Atheists hold there is no god but the Superstitious honour such fordid base and cruel gods that it were far better there were no gods then such for it is lesse impiety to say there is no god then to give his sacred name and honour to such wicked greedy barbarous and blood sucking devils I had rather saith he men should say there is no Plutarch then that they should say Plutarch is an inconstant fickle cholerick a revengefull and cruel man And so he concludes that superstition is the cause of Atheisme and impiety because men looking upon the ridiculous gestures impurity cruelty injustice madnesse undecency and all kind of villany perpetrated in their Temples concluded it were better have no gods then such abominable Deities But see Plutarch himselfe in his book of superstition Q. What was the Religion of Hispaniola A. They worshipped the Sun and Moon which they say at first shined out of a Cave and their tradition is that out of two Caves came mankinde the biggest men out of the greatest Cave and the least men out of the lesser Cave They worship also divers Idols with ugly shapes by which the Devil useth to speak to them these they call Zaemes to which they kept divers festivals In these they had their publiqu dances with the musick of shells tyed about their armes thighs and legs The King sits drumming when the people present themselves having their skins painted with divers colours of herbs When they sacrifice they use with a sacred hook thrust down their throat to turn up their stomack Then they sit down in a ring crosse-legged and wri-necked about the Idol praying their sacrifice might be accepted In some places the women dance about their Idols and sing the praises of their ancient Kings then both Sexes on their knees offer cakes which the Priests cut and give to every one a piece this each man keeps as a holy relique all the year against dangers If any fall sick the Priests impute this to their neglect in the Idols service therefore exhort them to build a Chapp● or dedicate a Grove to their god They think the Ghosts of the dead walk who assault such as are fearful and vanish from them who are not afraid Their several Rites are like those of the other Pagan Countries See P. Martyr Out of what I have written concerning the Idolatry of Asia Africa and America we may conclude with Tertullian lib. de Idolat that every sin by what name soever it be called or of whatsoever quality it is may be comprehended in the sin of Idolatry Idololatriae crimine expungitur to use his own phraise that is every sin is made up and attains to its perfection and consumination in idolatry so that as he sheweth in that book there is no such murtherer as the Idolater who not onely destroyeth the bodies of men and beasts to please his Idol but likewise murthereth his own soule there is no such Adulterer as he who not only goeth a whoring after false gods but also adulterates the truth for every false god is adultery there is no such thief as he for not only much robbery and oppression is committed to maintain false worship and idolatry as Arnobius instanceth in the Romans who to maintain the worship of their gods did rob all other gods and nations and with their triumphant gold Persius calls it aurum ovatum adorn their images but besides this theft the Idolater robs God of his right and honour giving it to such as are not gods I will not speak of the uncleannesse drunkennesse wantonnesse and other sins which accompany this master sin which Tertullian calls Principale crimen generis humani summus saeculi reatus c. devor●t●rium salutis the main wickednesse of mankind the chief guilt of the world the devourer or destroyer of mans happinesse and salvation therefore he will not have any Christian to paint or make graven images to be worshipped affirming that it is flatly against the law of God and likewise against their vow in baptism to forsake the Devil and his Angels how do they forsake him if they make him if they make it their trade to live by him how have they renounced him can they deny with their tongue what they confesse with their hand destroy that with their words which they build up with their deeds confesse one God and make many preach the true God and yet make false gods If any say that he worships none though he makes them Tertullian will answer him that he who makes false gods doth really worship them not with incense and sacrifice but with his wit sweat industry and skill which he impends on the making of them he is more then their Priest for without him they could have no Priest How can a Christian put forth that hand to touch the body of our Lord by which he hath made a body for the Devil And as it
the weaknesse of preaching against which the more the Roman Empire strugled the more it was foiled and found by experience that the blood of Martyrs was the seed of the Church which conquered the great conquerours not with acting but with suffering not by the sword but by the word and more by their death then by their life like so many Sampsons triumphing over these Philistines in their death and torments Q. 2. Seeing the power of Religion was so irresistible in the beginning that it carried all like a torrent before it how came it to grow so weake within 600 yeers that it yielded to Mahumetanism A. When God saw that the ungrateful professors of Christianity began to loath that heavenly Manna and to covet for Quales of new Doctrin he gave them leave to eat and poyson themselves therewith He was not bound to cast pearls before swine and to give that which was holy to dogs In his just judgements he removed the Candlestick from those who rejected the light and delighted themselves in darknesse it was fit the Kingdom of God should be taken from them and given to a people that should bring forth the fru●ts thereof They deserved to be plagued with a famine who grew wanton and spurned against their spiritual food Besides when the devil perceived he could do no good by open hostility and persecution but the more burden he laid upon the Palme the more it flourished and the oftener he flung the Gyant of Religion to the ground the stronger it grew with Antaeus he resovled at last to joyn the Foxes tayl to the Lio●s skin and to try whether the heat of the Sun would not make the traveller sooner forsake his cloak th●n the impetuosity of the winde He choaks all zea●e and sincerity with the baits of wealth and honour he poysons them with ambition pride covetousnesse and envie the evil man sowed the ●ases of dissention and heretical Doctrines in the Lords fields the spiritual husbandmen grew carelesse and idle the Shepherds neglect their flocks the dogs grow dumb and so the Lords sheep are suffered to stray and become a prey to the Wolves The watch-men being inebriated with honour wealth ease and security fall asleep on the walls and let the enemy feise upon the Lords City It was not then the weaknesse of Christian Religion that was the cause of Mahomets prevailing for the heat of the Sun is not weak though it cannot soften the clay not is the good seed that is cast into barren ground to be blamed if it doth not fructifie neither is the preaching of the Gospel impotent aud weak because it doth not alwayes edifie All the water in the Sea cannot mollifie a Rock nor all the rain in the clouds secundate a stony barren ground The subject must be capable or else the Agent cannot operate Mahumetanism then prevailing upon Christianity proceeded from the voluntary perversnesse of mens hearts from the malice and craft of the devil and from the just judgements of the Almighty Q. 3. What were the Engines that Satan used to overthrow Religion in the beginning A. Open persecution and heresie with the one he destroyed the bodies with the other he poysoned the souls of Christians Persecution with Saul killed its thousands but Heresie with David ten thousand Persecution was the Arrow that did flie by day but Heresie the Pestilence that raged in the darknesse Persecution was the Pruning knife that lopped the branches of Religion but Heresie the Axe laid to the root of the tree Persecution was the Dragon that drove the woman into the wildernesse but Heresie the beast that spake blasphemies Open Persecution began in Nero a Tyrant but Heresie in Simon a Witch Open Persecution began about 66 yeers after Christs Ascention but heresie immediatly after Christs departure about the sixth yeere in the beginning of Caligula's reign Persecution is the wild Boar of the Forrest but Heresie the little Fox that eateth up the Grapes of the Lords Vineyard Q. 4. Who was the first Heretick that opposed the Orthodox Religion and what were his opinions A. Simon called Magus because he was a Witch a Samaritan by birth and a Christian by profession he would have bought the gifts of the Holy Ghost for mony Act. 8. 13. He denyed the Trinity and affirmed himselfe to be the true God He taught that the world was made by the Angels not by God And that Christ came not into the world nor did he truly suffer He denyed also the Resurrection of the flesh and permitted promiscuous marriages He likewise affirmed that the true God was never known to the Patriarchs and Prophets This point was afterward maintained by Menander Cerinthus Nicholas Saturninus and Basilides succeeding Hereticks Upon this Doctrine also the Tertullianists and Anthropomorphits grounded their Heresie in ascribing a humane body to God His denying of the Trinity begot afterward the Sabellians Samosatenians Montanists Praxians Photinians and Priscillianists His Heresie of the Creation of the world by Angels begot the Marcionites Manichees and the Angelick hereticks who worshipped Angels In saying that Christ came not nor suffered he gave occasion to the Heresies of Valentinians Cerdonians Marcionites Aphthardocites Docits Samosatenians and Mahumetans Upon his denyal of the Resurrection Basilides Valentinus Carpocrates Apelles and the Hierarchits grounded their Heresies Besides Epicurism Libertinism and Atheism got vigour hereby By permitting licentiousnesse and promiscuous copulation he gave occasion to the Basilidians Gnosticks Manichees Acatians Eunomians and Mahumetans to live like beasts and to slight Marriage Besides these impious opinions he held Magick and Idolatry lawful He gave to the Angels barbarous names He slighted the Law of Moses as being not from God and blasphemously denyed the Holy Ghost to be a substance but a bare vertue or operation and caused his Disciples to worship his whore Helena or Selene for a goddesse Q. 5. Why did Simon Magus his scholars with many other hereticks since him besides Iews Mahumetans deny the Trinity A. Partly the malice of Satan who hates and persecutes the truth partly the pride of Hereticks who would seem wiser then the Church partly their ignorance because by naturall reason they cannot comprehend this ineffable mystery and partly malice against Christ whose Divinity is denyed by Jewes and Mahumetans bred this Heresie notwithstanding the truth is plainly set down both in the old and new Testament asserted by all the Greek and Latin Fathers confirmed by all Generall councills and proved by all Orthodox Divines that it is no more repugnant to naturall reason for the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost to be one God then for the soul mind and body to be one man but because this Doctrin is sufficiently proved by all Divines both ancient and moderne and all objections to the contrary answered and refuted I will forbeare to set down what is so plain and obvious already handled by so many Pens and will onely shew that the
Doctrin of the Trinity was not unknown even by the light of nature to the Gentile Philosophers Poets and Sibylls Zoroastres speaketh of the Father who having perfected all things hath delivered them to the second Mind which Mind saith he hath received from the Father knowledge and power Here is a plain testimony of the first and second person Concerning the third he saith that the Divine love proceeded from the Mind or Intellect what else is this Divine love but the Holy Ghost The Chaldaean Magi which were their Philosophers acknowledged three beginnings to wit Ormases Mitris and Ariminis that is God the Mind and soul Mercurius Trismegistus taught his Egyptians that God who is life and light begot the Word who is the other Intellect and maker of all things and together with him another who is the firie God or Spirit here the three persons are distinctly named He sheweth also that the subtil intellectual Spirit by the power of God did move in the Chaos this is consonant to the words of Moses the spirit of God moved on the waters Orpheus singeth the praises of the Great God and of his word which he first uttered Pythagoras and his Schollars were not ignorant of this Mystrey when they placed all perfection in the number of three and made love the Original of all things Zeno the Stoick confesseth that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word is God and the Spirit of Iove Socrates acknowledgeth God to be the Minde or Intellect that the Essence of God is his Idea which he begets by the knowledge of himself and by which he made the World Numenius the Pythagorean Plotinus Iamblichus and others do write very plainly of the three Hypostases or Persons in the Trinity so that no Christian can write more fully as may be seen in their own words as they are alleadged by Du-Plessis in his Book of the truth of Christian Religion who citeth also certain Oracles of Serapis the Egyptian chiefe Idol or Devil and of Apollo out of Suidns by which we may see how the evil Spirits are forced to confesse the Trinity I could also alledge the testimonies of the Sybills to the same purpose but because I study brevity and these heathen testimonies and Sibyllin verses are cited by Clemens Alexandrinus Origin against Celsus Cyril against Iulian Eusebius in his preparation Saint Augustine in his bookes of the City c. I forbear to insist any more on this subject And as the Gentiles gave testimony to this plurality of persons so did the Jewes also though now they reject this doctrine thinking that we by worshipping the Trinity do worship three Gods but their ancient Rabbins do prove the Trinity out of the Old Testament as Rabbi Simeon the Sonne of Iohai brings a place out of Rabbi Ibba upon Deuteronomy 6. Hearken O Israel the Lord our God is one God In the Hebrew thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iehovah Elohenu Iehovah Echad He shewes that the first Iehovah is God the Father the second word Elohenu our God is God the Son for so he is called by the Propher and Evangelist Emanuel God with us The third word Iehovah is God the holy Ghost And the fourth word Echad that is One is to shew the Unity of Essence in this plurality of persons Many other passages I could alleadge out of the writings of the ancient Rabbies to confirme this truth but this is already performed by Galatinus in his books de arcanis catholicae veritatis Q. 6 Who were Simons principal Scholars and what were their opinions A. 6. Menander a Samaritan also and a Magician He flourished at Rome in the time of Titus about 49. years afser Christ. He held the same impious opinions that Simon did but differed from him in saying that himself and not Simon was the Saviour of the world and that therefore all should be baptized in his name and not in the name of Simon or Christ and that all such should in power excel the Angels and should live immortally here so he denied the Resurrection of the flesh To him succeeded Saturninus and his fellow Scholar Basilides about the fifteenth year of Adrian the Emperour and after Christ the hundreth Saturninus was of Antioch and infected Syria with his poyson as Basilides did Egypt Saturninus held the same impieties with Simon and Menander but differed from them in saying that the world was made onely by seven Angels and not by all against the Will and Knowledge of God He taught also that some men were naturally good and some naturally evil and that nothing must be eat that hath life in it which was the Doctrine afterward of the Manichees And impiously affirmed that some of the antient Holy Prophets spake and were sent by Satan Basilides also was a Simonian Heretick but differed from him in holding there were so many Heavens as dayes in the year to wit 365. the chiefe god he called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the letters of which name are contained 365. He held also that this inferiour world and man was created by the 365th or last Heaven He taught also that the superiour god Abraxas begot the Minde this the Word Of the Word came Providence and of Providence Wisedome Of Wisdom the Angels were begot the last of which was the God of the Jewes whom he calls an ambitious and a turbulent God who had attemped to bring all Nations in subiection to his people He said that Christ was sent by Abraxas to oppose the turbulent God of the Jewes and doth not call him Iesus and Saviour but Goal a Redeemer He held it unlawful to suffer Martyrdom for Christ He permitted Idolatry and taught that no voluntary sin was pardonable and that Faith was not the gift of God but of Nature as also election The other errours which this Egyptian held for he was of Alexandria were the same that Simon maintained Q. 7. What was the Religion of the Nicholaitans and Gnosticks A. The Nicholaitans so called from Nicholas one of the seven Deacons Act. 6. and whose works Christ hated Rev. 2. gave themselves to all uncleannesse and sflshly lusts teaching that men ought to have their Wives in common They made no scruple of eating things offered to Idols At their meetings or love Feasts they used to put out the lights and commit promiscuous adulteries with each others wise They taught that the world was made by the copulation of light and darknesse out of which Angels Dae●ons and Men were procreated Mans seed and menstruous blood were with them sacred and used by the Gnosticks in their divine service whereby they brought an odium upon Christianity They would not have God but Angels creators of this inferiour world which Angels they called by divers barbarous names Nicholas the father of this Sect was by birth an Antiochian whose doctrine began to spread about the beginning of Domitians reign after Christ 52 yeers before S. Iohns banishment into Pathmos The professors of this
Sect did long retain the name of Nicolaitans but were called Gnosticks from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledge which proud title they gave themselves as if their knowledge had been transcendent above other men But their knowledge was so whimsical that neither they or any else understood it they babled much concerning their Aeones and of Ialdabaoth who made the heavens and all things we see of water They ascribed divers sons to their chief Aeon to wit Ennoia Barbeloth and Prunicon which they named Christ. They held that most things were procreated of the Chaos and the Abysse of water and darknesse They taught also that in faithful men were two souls one holy of the divine substance the other adventitious by divine insufflation common to man and beasts These are the souls that sin and which passe from man to beast after the opinion of Pythagoras they held also there were two Gods a good and an evill as the Manichees afterward did They made Jesus and Christ two distinct persons and that Christ descended into Iesu● when he was thirty yeers old and then he wrought miracles On this Doctrin the Eutychians and Nestorians grounded their Heresies They would have none to suffer Martyrdom for Christ who they said conversed on the earth after his Resurrection 18 moneths This Heresie was much spread in Asia and Egypt about 129 yeers after Christ and in Spain it flourished after Christ 386 yeers Out of this Sink the Valentinians Manichees and Priscillianists sucked their poyson Q. 8. Of what Religion were the Carpocratians A. Carpocrates by birth an Alexandrian in Egypt who flourished about the yeer of Christ 109. in the time of Antoninus Pius and was contemporary with Saturnius this Carpocrates I say ta●ght there were two opposite Gods that the Law and good works were needlesse to those that had faith that we could not avoid the rage of evil spirits but by doing evil for that was the way to please them Therefore they gave themselves over to Magick and a Libidinous life They taught also that Christ was a meer man and that their master Carpocrates was the better man hence sprung up the Samosatenians and Arrians They said also that Christ was begot as other men of Ioseph and Mary and that onely his soul ascended into Heaven They held Pythagorean transanimation but denyed the Resurrection and that this world was not made by God but by Satan Because their disciples should not publish their abominable mysteries they put a mark by a bodkin on their right Eare. Carpocrates carryed about with him his Punk Marcellina Q. 9. What was the Religion of Cerinthus Ebion and the Nazarites A. Cerinthus being a Jew by birth and circumcised taught that all Christians ought to be circumcised He lived in the time of S. Iohn the Apostle who would not enter into the same Bath with that pernicious Heretick He spred his Heresie in Domitians time about 62 yeers after Christ. He held the same impious Tenets that Carpocrates and taught that it was Iesus who died and rose again but not Christ. He denyed the Article of life eternal and taught that the Saints should enjoy in Ierusalem carnall delights for 1000 yeers the maintainers of this whimsie afterward were the Origenists Chiliasts or Millenaries and on this Mahomes founded his Paradise Ebion was a Samaritan by birth but he would be esteemed a Jew He lived also in Domitians time He denyed Christs divinity and held the necessity of the Ceremonial Law with Cerinthus And that the use of flesh was unlawfull because all flesh was begot of impure generation The Ebionites of all the New-Testament admitted only S. Matthews Gospel because it was written in Hebrew The Ebionite Heresie did not continue long under the name of Ebion but under other names to wit Sampsei and Elcesitae Against these Hereticks S. Iohn who lived in their time wrote his Gospel to prove Christs Divinity they rejected S. Pauls Epistles because they refell the Ceremonial Law As for the Nazarites or Nazarens they were before Cerinthus and Ebion about the end of Nero 37 yeers after Christ. They were the first that retained circumcision with Baptism and the ceremonial Law with the Gospel They were led much with private Revelations and Enthusiasms They had more Gospels then one to wit the Gospel of Eve and that which they called the Gospel of perfection They were much addicted to fables Noahs wife they called Ouria which signifieth fire in Chaldee she often times set the Ark on fire which therefore was so many times rebuilt They make her also the first that imparted to mankinde the knowledge of Angels Q. 10 What was the Heretical Religion of the Valentinians Secundians and Ptolemians A. The Valentinians who from their whimsical knowledge were called Gnosticks had for their master Valentinus an Egyptian who lived in the time of Antoninus Pius Emperor about a 110 yeers after Christ. He taught that there were 30 Aeones Ages or Worlds who had their beginning from Profundity and Silence that being the Male this the Female Of the Marriage or Copulation of these two were begot Vnderstanding and Truth who brought forth eight Aeones Of the Vnderstanding and Truth were begot the Word and Life which produced 10. Aeones The Word and Life brought forth Man and the Church and of these were procreated 12. Aeones these 8. 10. and 12. joyned together made up the 30. the last of these 30. being abortive produced the Heaven Earth and Sea Out of his imperfections were procreated divers evils as darkness out of his fear evil spirits out of his ignorance out of his tears springs and rivers and out of his laughter light They also taught that Christs body was meerly spiritual and passed through the Virgin as through a conduit or pipe Evil was natural they said to the creature and therefore they made God the author of evil which afterward was the doctrine of the Manichees They held that onely the soul was redeemed and that there should be no resurrection of the body Faith they taught was natural and consequently salvation which all did not attain for want of good works this was the Pelagian doctrine afterward They made three sorts of men to wit spiritual who were saved by faith onely these they called the sons of Seth hence the Sethian Hereticks The second sort are animal or natural who are saved by works and are of Abel hence the Abelites The third sort are carnal who cannot be saved these are of Cain hence the Cainite Hereticks They eat of things offered to idols slighted good works as needlesse and rejected the old Prophets Valentinus his chiefe Scholar and Successor was Secundus whose Disciples called Secundians changed the name but retained the Doctrine of Valentinus permitting all kind of vicious life in that they held knowledge without good works would bring men to Heaven Valentinus held that the Aeones were only the effects of the divine
minde but Secundus said they were true Essences subsisting by themselves He added also light and darknesse to the eight principal Aeones and so made up ten To Secundus succeeded Ptolomaeus in Valentinus his School He gave to Bathos or Profundity two Wives to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Cogitation and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Will. By the former Wife Bythus he procreated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Minde and by the other he begot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Truth Pt●lomaeus also slighted the old Law Q. 11. Of what opinions were the Marcites Colarba●● and Heracleonites A. Marcus was a notable Magician who lived under Antoninus Pius about 115. years after Christ. His Scholars called themselves Perfect and bragged that they were more excellent then Peter or Paul They denyed Christ humanity the resurrection of the flesh They held two contrary beginnings or Gods to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Silence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Speech From these the Marcionites and Manichees borrowed their two principles They retained their Aeones of Valentinus but reduced them to four to wit Silence Speech and two unnamed so in stead of the Christian Trinity they held a Quaternity They taught that all men and every member in mans body were subject to and governed by certain letters and characters They baptized not in the name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost but in the name of the Father unknown of Truth the Mother of all and of him who descended upon Jesus By Magical words they bragged that they could turn the Sacramental Wine into blood and bring downe the grace of God from Heaven into the chalice The Colarbasians so called from Colarbas or Colarbasus the author of that Sect ascribed the life actions and event● of man and all humane affairs to the seven Planets as authors thereof They held also but one Person in the Deity called by different names They divide Jesus from Christ as the Nestorians afterward and taught that Christ was as a flower compacted and made up of the 30. Aeones Heracleon Father of the Heracleonites lived about 110. years after Christ. These divided the Aeones into good and bad and held two beginnings to wit Profundity and Silence Profundity they held to be the most ancient of all and that of this with Silence all the other Aeones were procreated They said that man consisted of a soul body and some third substance they held it no sin to deny Christ in danger of life with the mouth if so be the heart believed in him They used in their praye●s Superstitious and Magical words to drive away Devils And they thought by anointing their dead with Water Oyl and Balsame to free them from eternal death Q. 12. Of what Religion were the Ophites Cainites and Sethites A. These were called also Ophei and Ophiomorphi from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Serpent which they worshipped This Sect began about the year of Christ 132. They taught that Christ was the Serpent which deceived Eve and that he in the form of a Serpent entred the Virgins Womb. In the Eucharist they used to produce a Serpent by inchanting words out of his hole or rather box in which they carried him about neither did they think that the Sacramental bread was consecrated till that Serpent had first touched it or tasted thereof they denyed also the Resurrection of the flesh and Christs incarnation The Caini were so called because they worshipped Cain as the author of much goodnesse to mankind so they worshipped Esau Core Dathan Abiram and Iudas who betrayed Christ saying that he foreknew what happinesse should come to mankind by Christs death therefore he betrayed him Some of this Sect were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is resisters of God for they opposed him what they could in his Laws therefore rejected the Law of Moses as evil and worshipped the wicked Angels whom they pleased by their evil actions they taught also that we were evil by nature and that the creator of the world was an unknown God and envious to Cain Esau and Iudas The Sethites so called fr●m Seth Adams Son whom they worshipped lived most in Egypt About the same time that the Cainites florished They thought that Seth was born of a superiour Vertue which they called Mother She of the chief God brought forth Seth the Father of all the Elect So they make Seth a part of the Divine substance who came in place of Abel who by the envy of some Angels stirring up Cain against him was slain They prate also that by the cunning of some Angels some of Cains posterity were preserved in the Ark from the flood which was sent by this great Mother to punish the Cainites for the murthering of Abel Of this posterity of Cain proceed all wicked men They denied the Resurrection and held that the Angels had carnal commerce with women and of this copulation two men were produced the one Earthly the other Heavenly being an Hermaphrodite who was created to Gods image who as they blasphemously taught is an Hermaphrodite and so Adam also They make Christ who was born of the Virgin to be no other then Seth. Q. 13. What Religion did the Archonticks professe and the Ascothyp●ae A. These were the last of the Valentinian Hereticks ca●●ed Archontici from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Principalities these they worshipped as inferior gods Father of the Angels and creators of the world of Photenia the Mother were the Angels begot by these Archontes One Peter an Anachorit and a Monk of Palestina was author of this Sect in the time of Constantius the Son of Constantine about the year of Christ 308. These spawned anothed Sect which they called Ascothyptas because they brake in pieces all the Plate and Vessels used in the Sacrament for they rejected the Sacraments of the Church They despised good works and gave themselves to all uncleannesse and slighted the Old Testament denied the Resurrection and Sacraments as is said thinking it unlawful to represent Spiritual and Heavenly things by corporal and earthly They thought that the Devil begot Cain and Abel of Eve both these sons were Reprobates And that a man who hath knowledge and saith may be saved let his life be never so Vitious and that the devil was the Son of the Jewish but not of the Christian God They also affixed to each Heaven or Sphere an angel as the Peripate●icks did an Intelligence Q. 14. What was the Religion of Cerdon and Marcion A. Cerdon lived about the time of Valentinus the Heretick under Antoninus Pius Emperor 110 yeers after Christ he taught that there were two contrary gods the one a god of mercy and pitty the other of justice and severity whom he called evil cruel and the maker of the world The former God he called good and the
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
of Christ 145. They rejected all married people as uncapable of Heaven and held that the Apostles perpetually abstained from marriage They had all things in common holding those unfit for Heaven who had any thing peculiar to themselves They denied repentance and reconciliation to those that fell after Baptism In stead of the Evangelists they used Apocrypha books as the Gospel according to the Egyptians the act of Andrew and Thomas These Hereticks were called also Apotactitae by the Latines and by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from renouncing of the world Q. 22. What was the Religion of the Sabellians Originians and Originists A. The Sabellians were indeed all one in opinion with the Noetians but this name grew more famous then the other for Sabellius an African by birth was a better scholar then Noetus Sabellianisme began to be known about the year of Christ 224. under the persecution of Valerian They held there was but one person in the Trintry whence it followeth that the Father suffered therefore they were named Patripassiani This one Person or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 say they is called by divers names as occasion serves The Originians were so called from one Origines a Monk who lived in Egypt and was disciple to Antony These condemned marriage extolled concubinat and yet were enemies to propagation committing the sin of Onan They also reject such books of the old and new Testament as seem to favour marriage The Origenists or Adamantians wree so called from that famous Origen who for his constancy in times of persecution and for his inexhausted labours was named Adamantïus His errours began to spred about the year of Christ 247. under Aurelian the Emperour and continued above 334. years They were condemned first in the council of Alexandria 200. years after his death and again in the fifth generall council of Constantinople under Iustinian the first they held 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a Revolution of souls from their estate and condition after death into the bodies again to converse in the world and so by denying the perpetuity of our future estate either in heaven or hell by consequence they denyed the Resurrection of the flesh They held also that the punishments of the Devils and Reprobates should last only a 1000. years and then should be saved They taught that Christ and the holy Ghost do no more see the Father then we see the Angels that the Son is coessential to the Father but not coeternal because say they the Father created him as he did also the holy Spirit That the soules were created long before this world and for sinning in Heaven were sent down into their bodies as into prisons They did also overthrow the whole historical truth of Scriptures by their allegories Q. 23. What was the Religion of the Samosatenians and Photinians A. Paulus Samosatenus was so called from Samosata where he was born near Euphrates His Scholars were called Paulinians and Samosatenians and afterward Photinians Lucians and Marcellians from these new teachers Their beleef was that Christ was meerly man and had no being till his incarnation This Heresie was taught 60. years before Samosatenus by Artemon and was propagated afterward by Photinus Lucian and Marcellus Arrius and Mahomet They held that the Godhead dwelt not in Christ bodily but as in the Prophets of old by grace and efficacy and that he was onely the external not the internal word of God Therefore they did not baptize in his name for which cause the Councel of Nice rejected their baptisme as none and ordered they should be rebapti● zed who were baptized by them This heresie under the name of Samosatenus brake out about 232. years after Christ and hath continued in the Eastern parts ever since The Photinians so called from Photinus born in the lesser Galatia held the same heresie with Samosatenus and began to propagate it about the year of Christ 323. at Syrmium where he was Bishop under Canstantius the Emperor and before him Marcellus his master under Constantine the great publickly taught it affirming also that the Trinity was the extention of the divinity which is dilated into three and contracted again into one like wax being contracted may be dilated by heat This heresie was much spread under Valens the Arrian Emperor 343. years after Christ. Q. 24. What was the Manichean Religion A. Manes a Persian by birth and a Servant by condition was Father of the Manichean Sect which was the sink of almost all the former heresies for from the Marcionites they derived their opinion of two Principles or gods one good the other bad With the Encratites they condemned the eating of flesh egges and milk they held also with the Anthropomorphites that God had members and that he was substantially in every thing though never so base as dung and dirt but was separated from them by Christs comming and by the Elect Manichea●s eating of the fruits of the Earth whose intestins had in them a cleansing and separating vertue They condemned also the use of wine as being the gall of the Princes of darknesse With Marcion also they rejected the Old Testament and currilated the New by excluding Christs Genealogies and said that he who gave the Law was not the true God They babled also that there was a great combat between the Princes of darknesse and of light in which they who held for God were taken captives for whose redemption God laboureth still With the Ophites they held that Christ was the Serpent which deceived our first Parents and with divers of the precedent Hereticks not onely did they deny Christs Divinity but his Humanity also affirming that he fained himself to suffer die and rise again and that it was the Devil who truly was crucified With Valentinus they taught that Christs body was fixed to the Stars and that he redeemed only our souls not our bodies With the former Hereticks they denyed the Resurrection and with Pythagoras held transanimation With Montanus Manes held that he was the true Para●let or comforter which Christ promised to send With the Gentiles they worshipped the Sun Moon and some Idols With Anaxago●As they held the Sun and Moon to be ships and taught that one Schacla made Adam and Eve They make no scruple to swear by the creatures they give to every man two contrary souls which still struggle in him With the Poets they held that the heaven was supported by the shoulders of one whom they called Laturanius They make the soul of man and of a tree the same in essence as being both of them a part of God with the former hereticks also they condemned marriage and permitted promiscuous copulation and that not for procreation but for pleasure They rejected baptisme as needlesse and condemned alms-giving or works of charity they make our will to sin natural and not acquired by our fall as for sin they make it a
substance communicated from parents to Children and not a quality or affection These wicked opinions raged in the world 340. years after Manes was excoriated alive for poysonning the Persian Kings Son these Hereticks were three Sects to wit Manichees Catharists or Puritans and Macarii or blessed Q. 25. What was the Religion of the Hierarchites Melitians and Arrians A. The Hierachites so called from Hieracha an Egyptian and a Monk who lived shortly after Origen under Gallienus 234. years after Christ taught that married people could not enjoy heaven nor infants because they cannot merit they admitted none into their Church but those that lived single They denied that Paradise in which man was created had any earthly or visible being They held Melchisedeck to be the Holy Ghost and denied the Resurrection The Meletians so called from Meletius a Theban Bishop in Egypt who because he was deposed for offering to Idols in spleen he taught the Novatian Heresie in denying pardon of sins to those that fell though they repented rejected all from their communion who in time of persecution fell from Christ though they afterward repented They used Pharisaical washings and divers other Judaical ceremonies and in their humiliations to appease Gods anger with dancing singing and gingling of small bells This Heresie began under Constatine the Emperour 286. years after Christ. The Arrians so called from Arrius a Lybian by birth and a Presbyter of Alexandria by Profesion were called also Exoucontji for saying that Christ was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 created of nothing This heresie brake out under Constantine 290. years after Christ and over-run a great part of the Christian world They held Christ to be a creature and that he had a mans body but no humane soul the divinity supplying the room thereof They held also the holy Ghost a creature proceeding from a creature to wit Christ. The Arrians in their Doxolegier gave glory not to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost but to the Father by the Son in the Holy Ghost They rebaptized the Orthodox Christian and baptized onely the upper parts to the Novel thinking the inferiour parts unworthy of baptisme Q. 26. What was the Religion of the Audians Semi-arrians and Macedonians A. The Audiani so called from Audaeus a Syrian who appeared under Valentinian the Emperour 338. yeares after Christ were named afterwards Anthropormorphytae for ascribing to God a humane body these as afterward the Denatists forsook the Orthodox Church because some wicked men were in it They held darknesse fire and water eternal and the Original of all things They admitted to the Sacrament all sorts of Christians even such as were profane and impenitent The Semi-arrians were those who neither would have Christ to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the same individual essence with the Father as the Orthodox Church held nor yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a like essence but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of a different Essence but of a like Will and so they taught that Christ was not God in Essence but in Will only and Operation This Heresie also held that the Holy Ghost was Christs creature It began under Constantius the Emperour 330. years after Christ. The chief author thereof was one-eyed Acatius Bishop of Cesaraea Palestina successor to Eusebius hence they were called Acatiani The Macedonians so called from Macedonius Bishop of Constantinople held that the holy Ghost was a creature and the servant of God but not God himselfe and withal that by the holy Spirit was meant only a power created by God and communicated to the creatures This Heresie sprung up or rather being sprung up long before was stifly maintained under Constantius the Son of Constantine 312. years after Christ and was condemned in the second Oecumenical councel at Constantinople under Theodosius the great These Hereticks were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fighters against the spirit Q. 27. Of what Religion were the Aerians Aetians or Eunomians and Apollinarists A. The Aerians so called from Aerius the Presbyter who lived under Valentinian the first 340. years after Christ held that there was no differance between a Bishop and a Presbyter that Bishops could not ordain that the dead were not to be prayed for that there should be no set or anniversary fasts and with the Encratites or Apotactitae admitted none to their communion but such as were continent and had renounced the world They were called Syllabici also as standing captiously upon Words and Syllabies They are said also to condemn the use of flesh the Aetians were called so from Aetius a Deacon whose successor was Eunomius about the year of Christ 331. under the Emperor Constantius he was Bishop of Cyzicum whose disciples were called Eunomians and Anomei for holding that Christ was no way like the Father They were called also Eudoxiani Theophron●ani When they were banished they lived in holes and caves and so were called Troglodytae and Gothici because this heresie prevailed much among the Goths by means of Vlphillas their Bishop These hereticks held that God could be perfectly here comprehended by us that the Son was neither in power essence or will like the Father and that the Holy Ghost was created by the Son that Christ also assumed onely mans body but not his soul. They permitted all kind of licentiousnesse saying that faith without good works could save The Eunomians did rebaptise the Orthodox professors and baptised in the name of the Father uncreated the Son created and the Holy Ghost created by the Son The Apollinarists so called from Apollinaris Presbyter in Laodicea divided Christs humanity in affirming that he assumed mans body and a sensitive soul but not the reasonable or intellective soul of man because that was supplied by the divinity from this division they were named Dupla●es and Dim●iritae In stead of the Trinity they acknowledge onely three distinct degrees of power in God the greatest is the Father the lesser is the Son and the laest of all the Holy Ghost They held that Christs flesh was consubstantial with his divinity and that he took not his flesh from the Virgin but brought it from Heaven They held that Christ had but one will that mens souls did propagate other souls that after the Resurrection the ceremonial Law should be kept as before This heresie brake out 350. years after Christ under Valens the Emperor Q. 28. What did the Antidicomarianites Messalians and Metangismonites professe A. The former of these were so called because they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adversaries to Maries Virginity Whence they were named Antimaritae and Helvidians from Helvidius the author who lived under Theodosius the great 355. years after Christ. These held that Mary did not continue a Virgin after Christ was born but that she was known by Ioseph whereas she was indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a perpetual Virgin The Messalians were so
the Circumcellions so called from their Cells and Cottages in which they lived to shew their austerity these made no bones to murther all they met that were not of their Religion so that they were more dangerous then High-way Robbers The Donatists were named also Parmenianists from Parmenianus one of Donatus his disciples At Rome they were named Campates from the Camp or Field and Montenses from the Hill where they used to hide themselves The Priscillianists were so named from Priscillianus a Spaniard who under Gratian the Emperor spread his heresie first in Spain 348. years after Christ. From thence like a canker it run through all the West his heresie was made up of former heresies for with the Manicnes he held that the world was made by an evil god With the Sabellians he confounded the persons of the Trinity with the Origenists he taught that mens souls were made before their bodies in some receptacle of Heaven and with the Manichees that they were parcels of the Divine Essence With Astrologers they held that all humane events depended on the Stars and with the Stoicks that we sin necessarily and coactively With the Gnosticks they condemned marriage with the Encratites the eating of flesh with the Audians they allowed lying and perjury in matters of Religion and with the G●osticks they rejected the ancient Prophets as fanatical and ignorant of the will of God The Rhetorians so called from one Rhetorius held the same Tenet which the Mahumetans do at this day namely that every man shall be saved by the Religion he professeth and that therefore no Religion should be forced but men should be left to their own choice and will The Feri or wild Hereticks were such as held it unlawful to eat or converse with men therefore they held none should be saved but such as lived alone They taught also that the holy Ghost was a creature Q. 33. What were the Theopaschitae Trithei●ae Aquei● Mel●●onii Ophei Tertullii Liberatores and Nativitarii A. The Theopaschites held that the divinity of Christ suffered as if there had been in him but one nature because one person The Tritheits divided the Essence of God into three parts the one they called the Father the other the Son and the third the Holy Ghost as though either of the persons had not bin perfectly God The Aquei held that the water was not created but coeternal with God this heresie was culled out of the Hermagenian and Audian Tenets The Melitonii so named from one Melito taught that not the soul but the body of man was made after Gods Image and so with the Anthropomorphites they made God corporeal The Ophei so called from one Opheus held there were innumerable worlds The Tertullii from one Tertullus taught that the souls of wicked men should be converted into Devils and Savage Beasts Li●eratores are those who taught that Christ by his descending into Hell did set at liberty all wicked that then be●eved in him Nativitarji were such as taught that Christs Divine Nativity had a beginning because it is written Psal. 2. Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee so they acknowledged the Eternity of his Essence but not of his Filiation These were but branches of former Heresies broached by obscure or unknown authors and of short continuance Q. 34. What were the Luciferians Jovinianists and Arbicks A. Luciferians so called from Lucifer Bishop of Caralitanum in Sardinia who lived under Iul●an the Apostate 333. years after Christ taught with the Cerinthians and Marcionites that this world was made by the Devil That mens souls were corporeal and had their being by propagation or traduction They denyed to the Clergy that fell any place for repentance or reconciliation neither did they restore Bishops or inferious Clerks to their Dignities if they fel into Heresie though they afterward repented This was the Doctrine of the old Nova●ians and Meletians these Luciferians were named also Homonymians for using the word flesh ambiguously in their dispurations The Iovinianists were so called from Iovinian a Roman who lived under Jovinian the Emperour 335. years after Christ. These held with the Stoicks that all sins were equal that after baptisme we could not sin that fasting was needlesse that Virginity was not better then the married life and that the blessed Virgin in bearing Christ lost her Virginity The Arabicks were so named from Arabia the countrey where this heresie was broached and maintained under Philip the Emperour 217. years after Christ they held that mens soules died with their bodies and that both in the last day should rise again From this heresie they were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is mortal soules not much different from them are the Psychopanuychitae of this age who make the soul sleep in the Grave with the body till the Resurrection Q. 35. What were the Collyridians Paterniani Tertullianists and Abelonitae A. The Collyridians were hatched also in Arabia and so named from a kinde of Cakes or Buns which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these Cakes they presented every year with great ceremony to a certain Maid fit●ng in a chair of State and covered with a vail ●n honour of the Virgin Ma●y these flourished under Theo●osius the great 357. years after Christ. Paterniani so called from one Paternus an obscure fellow were named also Venu●iani from Venus which by their venereal actions they honoured more then God These held that all the lower parts of mans body from the Navel downward were made by the Devil and therefore they gave themselves to all lasciviousnesse and uncleannesse therefore they were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deriders of good manners and honesty The Tertullianists were so called from that famous Lawyer and Divine Ter●ullian who lived under Severus the Emperour about 170 years after Christ. He being excommunicated by the Roman Clergy for a Montanist fell unto these heretical opinio●s to wit that God was corporeal but without delineation of members that mens souls were not onely corporeal but also distinguished into members and had corporeal dimensions and did encrease and decrease with the body and that the soul had its Original by propagation or traduction He held also that the souls of wicked men after death were converted into Devils that the Virgin Mary ● after Christs birth did marry once and with the Catap●rygian he bragged much of the Paraclet or Spirit which they said was poured on them in a greater measure then on the Apostles He condemned all use of arms and wars among Christians and with the M●ntanists rejected second marriages as no better then adultery The Abelonitae were so called from Abeo Adams Son these taught that Abel was married but had no carnal commerce with his Wife because there is no mention made of his Children as there is of Cains and Seths For
was not Head of the Church nor Vicar of Christ nor successor of Peter that Bishops were murtherers in delivering over to the secular power such as did not obey them that canonical obedience was a humane invention that Priests though excommunicate ought to preach that Excommunications Suspensions and Interdicts were invented to maintain the Clergies pride These and such like points did he defend for which he was condemned in the councel of Constance These same opinions were maintained by Hierom of Prague for which also he was by the same Councel condemned the next year One Pickard of F●anders renewed in B●hem●a the Heresie of the Ad m●tes The Hussites divided themselves into thr●e Sects to wit the Pragense● the Thabo ite● so called from mount Thabor where Christ was transfigurrd which name Zisca their Captain gave them calling the Castle where they used to meet Thabor as if they had seen there Christs transfigurat●on The third Sect were called Orphans after Zisca's death as having lost their Fa●her and Patron all these used barbarous cruelty against Priests Monks Churches Images Reliques and such as professed the Roman Catholick Religion The Mos●ovites or Russians fell off to the Greek Religion and held that the Pope was not the chief Pastor of the Church that the Roman Church was nor head of the rest They rejected also the Latine Fathers the definitions canons and decrees of the general Councels and used leavened bread in their Eucharist One Rissuich a Hollander taught that the Angels were not created that the soule perished with the body that there was no Hell that the matter of the Elements was coeternal with God He blasphemed Christ as a Seducer and not the Son of God He held that Moses never saw God nor received his Law from him that Scriptures were but Fables that the Gospel was false and such like blasphemous stuffe did he spue out for which he was burned Q. 10. What opinions did the Sixteenth Century h●ld A. Martin Luther an Augustin Frier ●aught tha● Indulgences were unlawful that the Epistle to the Hebrews the Epistle of Iames the second of P●ter the two last of Iohn the Epistle of Iude and the Apecaly●e were not canonical He opposed inv●cation of Saints Image w●rship Free-w●ll the Popes Supremacy Excommunication te●poral posse●●ions of ●he Clergy merit of Works possibility of tu●filing the Law the Monastical life caeliba● canonical ob●dience distinction of Meats Transubstantiation communion under one kinde the Masse auricular confession Absolution Purgatory extream Unction and five of the Sacraments He held also that General Councels might erre that 〈◊〉 was not a particular person that Faith onely justified that a faithfull man may be assured of his salvation that to the faithful sin is not imputed that the first motions are sin that Sacraments did not confer grace Divers other opinions are fathered upon him by his adversaries as may be seen in the above named Authors The Anabaptists so called from Re-baptizing had for their author one Nicolas Storke who pretended familiarity with God by an Angel promising him a Kingdom if he would reform the Church and destroy the Princes that should hinder him His Scholar Muncer raised an army of 4000. Bores and Tradesmen in Suevia and Franconia to maintaine his Masters dreams but they were overthrown by Count Mansfield Iohn of Leyden a Taylor renewed the said dreams and made himself King in Munster of the Anabaptists whose Viceroy was Knipherdo●ing but this phantastical Monarchy was soon destroyed the Town taken after 13. moneths Siege where the King and his Viceroy with their chief Officers were put to death Their Tenets were that Christ was not the Son of Mary nor true God that we were righteous not by faith in Christ but by our own merits and sufferings They rejected original sin baptisme of Infants communion with other Churches Magis●●acy among Christians Oaths and punishments of Malefactors They refused to swear allegeance to Princes and held that a Christian may have many wives and that he may put away his wife if she be of another Religion and marry another That no man must possesse any thing in proper that re-baptization may be used that before the day of judgement the godly should enjoy a Monarchy here on Earth that man had free-will in spiritual things and that any man may Preach and give the Sacraments Q. 11. What are the Anabaptists of Moravia A. These at first called themselves Apostolicall because they did imitate the Apostles in going bare-foot and in washing one anothers feet in having also all things in common amongst them But though this custom be now left yet at this day in Moraviae they have a common Steward who doth distribute equally things necessary to all They will admit none into their Society but such as have some trade and by their handy worke can get their livings As they have a common Steward for their temporals so they have a common Father for their spirituals who instructs them in their Religion and prayeth with them every morning before they goe abroad to worke These publike prayers are to them instead of Sermons They have a generall governour or head of their church whom none knoweth but themselves for they are bound not to reveal him They communicate twice in the year the men and women sit promiscuously together On the Lords day they walk two and two through the Towns and Villages being clothed in black and having slaves in their hands They are much given to silence at table for a quarter of an houre before they eat they sit and meditate covering their faces with their hands the like devotion they shew after meat All the while their governour stands by to observe their gesture that if any thing be unbeseeming he may tell them of it When they come to any place they discourse of the last judgement of the eternall paines of hell of the crueltie of Divels tormenting mens bodies and souls that so they may afright simple people into their religion then they comfort them by shewing them a way to escape all those torments if they will be but rebaptized and embrace their religion They observe no festival days nor will they admit of any disputations Q. 12. What Sects are sp●ung out of Lutheranism A. Besides the Anabaptists already mentioned there be Adiaphorists of which Melancthon is thought to be author these hold the customs and constitutions of the church of Rome to be things indifferent and that they may be professed or not professed without scruple 2. Vbiquitaries These hold that Christs humanity as well as his divinity is every where even in hell Bre●tius is thought to be father of this opinion But if Christs humanity be every where then we must deny the articles of his Resurrection Ascention and comming again to judge the Quick and the dead for what needs there such motions if he be everywhere 3. Majorists so called from one
George Maior one of Luthers disciples who taught that no man nay not infants can be saved without good works But it s ridiculous to expect good works from Infants who have not as yet the use of reason nor organs fit for operation 4. Osiandrists so called from Andrew Osiander a Lutheran who taught that Christs body in the Sacrament suffered was corruptible and died again directly against Scripture saying that Christ being risen from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him He taught also that we are not justified by faith or works but by the essential righteousnesse of Christ dwelling in us But the essential righteousnesse of Christ is the righteousnesse of his divinity which is not communicable nor separable from him 5. Augustinians in Bohemia these taught that none went to heaven or hell till after the last judgement whereas Christ tells the contrary to the good thiefe this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise and affirmeth that the soul of Lazarus was carried by Angels into Abrahams bosom and Dives into hell Wherefore did Christ ascend to heaven but that we might be where he is They make also dormice or swallows of mens souls saying that they sleep till the resurrection if Saint Steven when he was dying had known this Doctrin he would not have called upon the Lord Jesus to receive his spirit The story also of Lazarus and Dives doth overthrow this conceit They say also that Christs human nature is not as yet ascended into heaven which directly overthroweth our Creed in that article as likewise the Scriptures and withall the hope and comfort of a Christian. 6. Stancarians so called from one Francis Stancarus a Mantuan who taught that Christ justifieth us and is our mediator only according to his humane nature whereas our redemption is the work of the whole person and not of one nat●re alone 7. Adamites so called from one Adam author of the Sect they use to be naked in their Stoves and Conventicles after the example of Adam and Eve in Paradise And therefore when they marry they stand under a Tree naked having onely leaves of trees upon their privities they are admitted as brethren and sisters who can without lust look upon each others nakedness but if they cannot they are rejected 8. Sabbathar●an● so called because they reject the observation of the Lords day as not being commanded in Scripture and keep holy the Sabbath day onely because God himselfe rested on that day and commanded it to be kept But they forget that Christ came to destroy the Ceremonial Law wherof the Sabbath in respect of the seventh day was a branch and therefore Christ himself brake it when he commanded the sick man whom he cured to carry home his bed on that very day 9. Clancu●arii were those who professed no religion with their mouth thinking it sufficient to have it in their heart They avoid all Churches and publick meetings to serve God thinking their private houses to be better then Temples whereas they should remember that private prayers cannot be so effectual as publick neither is it enough to believe with the heart except we also confesse with the mouth for he that is ashamed to confesse Christ before men shall not be confessed by Christ before his Father and his holy Angels 10. Davidistae so called from one David George a Holl●nder he gave himselfe our to be the Messiah sent by the holy Spirt to restore the house of Israel that the Scriptures were imperwect and that he vas sent to bring the true Law and Doctrine that the ●oul was pure from sin and that the body onely sinned whereas indeed they both concur in the act of sinning and therefore are both punishable especially the Soul which is the chiefe agent the body is but the instrument He taught also that a man may have many Wives to replenish spiritual Paradise that it was no sin to deny Christ with the mouth so long as they believed on him in their heart He rejected also the books of Moses 11. Mennonists so called from one Mennon a F●●eslander These deny Christ to be born of Mary affi●ming that he brought his flesh from Heaven he called himselfe the Judge of men and Angels 12. Qeistae and 〈◊〉 who taught there were three distinct Gods differing in degrees One George Paul of Cracovia is held to be author of this Sect. 13. Antitrinitarians these being the spawn of the old Arrians and Samosatenians deny the Trinity of Persons and the two natures of Christ their author was Michael Servetus a Spaniard who was burned at Geneva 14. Antimarians who denied Maries Virginity affirming she had other children besides Christ because there is mention made of Christs brethren in the Gospel this is the old Heresie of Cerinthus and Helvidius whereas they consider not that in Scripture those of the same kinred are called brothers So is Lot called Abrahams brother and L●●an Iacobs Unckle is called his brother 15. Antinomians who reject the Law affirming there is nothing required of us but faith this is to open a wide gap for all ●mpiety Christ came not as he saith himselfe to abolish the Law but to fulfil it If there be no use of the Law then they must deny Gods justice and that it is now an uselesse attribute of the divinity ●16 Infernale● these held that Christ descended into no other hell but into the grave onely and that there is no other hel but an evil conscience whereas the Scripture speaketh of hell fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels and calls it the bottomlesse pit c. 17. Bequinians so called from one Boquinus their Master who taught that Christ did not die for the wicked but only for the faithful so they make him not to be the Saviour of mankind and of the world but a particular Saviour only of some wheras Saint Iohn saith that Christ is the reconciliation for our sins and not for ours onely but also for the sins of the whole world 1 Iohn 2. 2. 18. Hutistes so called from one Iohn Hut who take upon them to prefix the very day of Christs comming to judgement whereas of that day and hour knoweth no man nay not the Angels in Heaven 19. Invisibiles so called because they hold that the Church of Christ is invisible which if it be in vain did he compare it to a City built upon a hill ●●in vain also doth he counsel us to tell the Church if our brother wil not be reformed in vain also doth the Apostle warn Bishops Presbyteries to look to their stock to rule the Church which Christ hath purchased with his blood Act. 20. How can he be called the sheepherd of that ●●ock which he neve● saw 20. Qnintinistae so called from one Quintinus of Bicardy a Tailour He was author of the Libertins who admit of all Religions Some of them mock at all Religions at that Lucianist who ●rot a book of the three Impostors
this life our sinnes are still inherent in us though they be not imputed to us that wee are justified by faith without works and that faith is never without charity that the best of our works deserve damnation that here we may be assured of our justification and salvation that the Church Liturgy ought not to be read in Latin but in the vulgar tongue that faith is a more excellent vertue then charity that there is no merit in us that in this life we cannot possibly fulfil the Law that to invocate the Saints to worship Images and Reliques or the Crosse is Idolatry that usury is not altogether unlawful that Lent and other set Fasts are not to be kept that there be onely two Scaraments Baptisme and the Lords supper and that the Sacraments cannot justifie or confer grace that the Baptisme of water is not of absolute necessity nor depends the efficacy of it from the intention of the Minister nor ought it to be administered by private men or women in private houses That Christ is not corporally in the Eucharist that in the want of Bread and wine other materials may be used and that Wine alone without Water is to be used that there is no Transubstantiation nor ought to be any adoration of the Bread that the ●up should be administred to all that Extream Unction was onely temporary in the Church that the Clergy ought to marry He rejected also the Church-Hierarchy and Ceremonies and exorcisms Penance also Confirmation Orders Matrimony and Extream Unction from being Sacraments Q. 15. What other opinions in Religion were held this age A. Servetus a Spaniard who was burned at Genev● taught with the Sabellians that there was but one Person in God and that there was in Christ but one nature with Eutychees he denied the holy Ghost and Baptisme to Infants which he would have to be deferred till the thirtieth year of their age He held also that God was Essential in every creature Brentius a Lutheran taught that Christs body after its ascension is every where whence sprung up the Vbiquitaries Castelli● a School-Master in Geneva held that the Canticles was not Scripture but a Love Ballade between Solomon and one of his Concubines One Postellus taught that men of all Sects and Professions should be saved by Christ. O●iander held that we were justified not by ●aith but by the Essential righteousnesse of God which he said was the formal cause of our justification One 〈◊〉 a Ma●tuan taught that Christ justified us not as he was God but as he was man Amsdorphius wrot a Book to prove that good works were pernicious to salvation One George Mai●r taught that Infants could not be justified for want of good works Iohn Agric●●● affirmed that the Law was altogether needlesse and that Christians were not tied to the observation thereof Hence sprung up the Antinomians One Steunbergetus in Mor●via denyed the Trinity the Divinity of Christ the holy Ghost and Virginity of Mary he rejected also Baptisme and the Lords day affirming we had no command in Scripture to keep that but the Sabbath onely One O●inus taught that ●olygamy or multiplicity of Wives was lawful One Valentinus Gentil●● of Naples denied the Trinity and rejected the Creed of Ath●●●●ius One 〈◊〉 of Cracovia in ●oland denyed also the Trinity and th●●ty of Essence and taught that neither the Second nor Third Person were God that Satan was created evil that mans intellect is eternal that our free will was a passive power moved necessarily by the appetite that God was the Author of sin and that the will of man in sinning was conformable to the will of God that it was not adultery to lie with another mans Wife that we must belive nothing but what is evident to sense or reason that the same body which dieth riseth not again that the soul perished with the body that there should be no care had of burial that separated souls could not suffer corporeal fire and that God being a Spirit should not be invocated by our mouth but by our heart One Swenkfeldius taught that the Scripture was not the Word of God nor that our faith depended on it but it rather on our faith That Christ brought his body with him from Heaven That Christs humanity became God after his ascension that every man was endowed with the same essential vertues of justice wisdom c. which were in God That the power and efficacy of Gods word preached was the very Son of God In Moravia there started up some professors called Nudipedales because they went bare-footed these in imitation of the Apostles forsook houses Lands Businesse and Children and lived together in common avoiding the society of other people Another Sect sprung up which called themselves Free Men teaching that they were freed from obedience to Magistrates from Taxes Tythes and other duties that after baptisme they could not sin That they were not onely like God but already deified And that it was lawful among themselves but no where else to have women in common Q. 16. Were there no other opinions held this Century A. Yes many more so vain and luxuriant are the wits of men in finding out many inventions and shaping to themselves forms and Ideas of Religions every one esteeming his own the best and as much in love with his own imaginations as Narcissus was with his shadow in the Water or Dercalion with his own picture Some reject Scriptures others admit no other writings but Scriptures Some say the Devits shall be saved others that they shall be damned others that there are no Devils at all Some hold that it is lawful to dissemble in Religion others the contrary Some say Antichrist is come some say not others that he is a particular man others that he is not a man but the Devil and others that by Antichrist is meant a succession of men some will have him to be Nero some Caligula some Mahomet some the Pope some Luther some the Turk some of the Tribe of Dan and so each man according to his fancy will make an Antichrist Some onely will observe the Lords day some onely the Sabbath some both and some neither Some will have all things in common some not Some will have Christs body onely in Heaven some everywhere some in the Bread others with the bread others about the bread others under the Bread and others that Christs body is the bread or the bread his body And others again that his body is transformed into his divinity Some wil have the Eucharist administred in both kinds some in one some not at all Some will have Christ descend to Hell in respect of his soul some onely in his power some in his divinity some in his body some not at all some by Hell understand the place of the damned some Limbus Patrum others the wrath of God others the state of the dead others the grave Some wil make Christ two Persons some give him but
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
be with till the end of the world and on which he hath bestowed the Spirit of Truth to conduct her into all Truth and which he hath built upon the Rock so that Hell Gates shall not prevail against her his Church I say is a congregation and consisteth not of one but of many and Christ hath promised that where two or three are gathered together in his name he will be in the midst of them 5. Because God is better praised and more honoured of many together then by one alone therefore David will praise God and declare his name in the great Congregation Christ will have our light to shine before men that they seeing our good works may glorifie our Father which is in heaven This cannot be done by him that lives amongst wild beasts in a Desart How can he honour God by the exercise of justice mercy charity humility and other vertues chiefly of his patience in suffering injuries and of his obedience to superiours How shall he find out his own infirmities and failings seeing selfe-love is in every man and no man can so well pry into himselfe as another and the heart of man is deceitful above all things 6. And lastly no man alone can be so secure from danger of enemies as when he is in company and therefore Satan is more ready to assault man by tentations when he is alone then when he is in the company and society of others So he set not upon Christ when he was in Ierusalem but when he was led by the Spirit into the D●sart therefore wo to him that is alone for when he falls there is not a second to help him up As then in the body natural God did not separate one member from another but united them all in one bulk under one head to be animat●d by one heart or soul that they might help each other so hath he done in the body Pol●tick of mankind Q. 6. Who were the first Monk● after Anthony A. The Thabennesii so called from Thabenna an Island in the Province of Thebais In this one Pachomius an E●emite about the time of Constantius Constantines Son assembled divers Monks together and by the advice of an Angel so goeth the story prescribed them these rules to wit that they should live together in one house distinguished into divers Cells and in each cell should remain three Monks but should all eat in one Hall No man must be forbid to eat or fast they must sleep not lying on beds but sitting in their chaires they must wear Goats skins which they must never put off but when they communicate then they must come only with their hood with which their heads must be covered when they eat that they may not be seen to eat for in eating they must neither cast their eyes off from the Table nor must they speak No stranger must be admitted without three years trial They must pray twelve times in the day time likewise in the evening and in the night a Psalm preceding each prayer The Monks were divided into 24 Orders according to the number of the Greek letters Q. 7. What were the Religious rules that Sa●nt Ba●il p●escribed to his Monks A. Saint Basil Presbyter of Caesarea in Cappadocia being molested by Eusebius Bishop there to avoid trouble and disturbing of the Church retired to a Monastery in Pontus where he preached to the Monks of that place and departing thence travelled about the country of Pontus and perswaded the Eremites who lived apart in caves and cells of the Desarts to unite themselves in Monasteries and withal prescribes to them these 95. subsequent rules which were imbraced by most of the Eastern Monks The Rules were these 1. To love God with all their heart soul and strength and their neighbours as themselves 2. To ground this Love of God upon his power glory and excellency as ●e is in himselfe and on his goodnesse mercy and bounty towards us 3. That the love of our neighbour be grounded on the command and will of God and on his love towards us his enemies for if God hath so highly loved us that were his enemies shall not we when he commands us love our neighbours 4. That they should not live any longer a sunder but together because of the mutual helps comforts instructions exercise of vertues efficacy of prayers security from dangers which are in the sociable not in the solitary life ● That they should forsake the delights and vanities of the world and with the Apostle to crucifie it and to be crucified to it 6. That they should dispense their wealth to the poor and indigent 7. That none be admitted into their Fraternity without probation 8. That Infants be also admitted but not without the consent of their Parents 9. That they study to be continent and sober in their diet and behaviour 10. Is set down the m●asure of their eating and drinking and simplicity of food 11. That there be no affectation or contention for superiority of place at the Table but that all things be done there with order and decency 12. That their appa●el be plain simple and homely and that they wea● a girdle after the example of Iohn Baptist and the Apostles 13. That they walk not after their own sense and pleasure but as they are directed by Gods word 14. That they be obedient to their Superiours but chiefly to God 15. That they should serve God with the same affection as David did when he said As the Hart brayeth for the Rivers of water so doth my soul after thee O God 16. That he who is their Governour should conside● whose minister he is and that he should be as tende● of his charge as a nutse of her child 17. That he reprove at first gently and in the spirit of meeknesse but that he esteem of the obstinate as Heathens and Publicans 18. That he suffer not the least offence to go unreproved seeing the least is a breach of Gods Law 19. That repentance be in sincerity 20. That it be accompanied with good works 21. And with confession 22. That if a man relapse into sin he may use more sincerity in his repentance then before for it seems the disease was not perfectly cured 23. Let him that reproveth be as a Father or a Physitian and he who is reproved as a Son and a Patient 24. That no man defend or excuse himself in his evil courses 25. That among them all things be in common 26. That men of Estates bestow on their Kindred what is their due and the remainder on the poor 27. That none return to their Parents houses except it be to instruct them and by their Superiors leave 28. That none give way through idlenesse for their minds to waver or wander up and down 29. That to avoid idle and sinfull dreams in the night let every one be diligent in meditating on the Law and the word of God by day 30. That with the
may be heard and seen But they must do nothing without the leave of the Abbatesse and some witnesses except in time of confession Priests must not enter the Nunnery except to give the Sacrament in the agony of death and that with some witnesses all the Priests and Brothers may enter to perform Funerall obsequies The Bishop of the Diocesse must be the Father and Visitor of the Monasteries and Nunneries the Prince of the Territory shall be the Protector and the Pope the faithful Guardian without whose will no Covent shall be made Let there be a hole like a grave still open in the Covent that the sisters may pray every day there with the Abbatesse taking up a little dust between her fingers that God who preserved Christs body from the corruption of the grave would also preserve both their bodies and souls from the corruption of sin Let there be a Beer or Coffin at the Church-door with some earth that all commers in may remember they are dust and to dust shall return to the observers of this rule Christ promiseth his aid who revealed himself to Saint Briget and counsels her to convey it to the Pope to be confirmed So goeth the story as it is set down by Hospinian who translated it out of the German into the Latin tongue this order came into England An. 1414. and was placed at Richmond There be few of these elsewhere except in Sweden Q. 21. What was the Order of S. Katherine and of S. Iustina A. Katherine born at Senae in Tuscany in her Childhood vowed Virginity and in a dream saw Dominick with a Lilly in his hand and other religion-founders wishing her to professe some of their orders she embraced that of Dominick in which she was so strict that she abhorred the smell of flesh drunk onely water and used no other cheer but bread and raw herbs She lay upon boards in her cloathes She girt her self so close with an Iron Chain that it cut her skin she used to watch whole nights together and scarce slept half an hour in two days in imitation of S. Domimick She used to chastise her self three times every day with that Iron Chain for an hour and half at a time so that the blood run from her shoulders to her feet One chastisement was for her self the other for the dead and the third for those that were alive in the world Many strange stories are recorded of her as that Christ appeared and married himself to her with a Ring that he opened her side took out her old heart and put a new one instead of the former that he cloathed her with a bloody coloured garment drawn out of the wound in his side so that she never felt any cold afterwards and divers other tales to this purpose Some say this order began Anno 1372. others Anno 1455. The Nuns of this order wear a white garment and over it a black Vaile with a head-covering of the same colour The order of Saint Iustina was instituted by Ludevicus Barbus a Venetian Anno 1409. after the ancient discipline of Benedict This rule was enlarged by Eugenius the fourth and confirmed by Iohn 24. The Monks of this order are carefull not to eat out of the Covent with seculars and to wash the feet of strangers Q. 22. What were the Eremites of Saint Hierom of Saint Saviour the Albati Fratricelli Turlupini and Montolivetenses A. Saint Hieroms Eremites in Spain under Saint Austins rule was instituted about the year 1366. in Vibinum a City of Vmbria in Italy in the time of Pope Gregory the nineth and was confirmed by Gregory the twelfth Of this order there are in Italy five and twenty Covents They differ in their habit and other things little or nothing from the other Monks of Saint Hierom. The Canons of Saint Saviour were instituted also in Italy neer Senae in a place called Scopetum whence they are named Scopeti●i They follow Saint Austins rule Their Author was one Franch of Bononia Anno 1366. in the time of Pope Vrban the the fifth and were confirmed by his successor Gregory the eleventh Anno 1370. They wear a white cloak with a white hood above a white linnen gowne Albati were so called from the white linnen they wore these in the time of Pope Boniface the nineth Anno 1399. came down from the Alpes into Luc● Flaminia Hetruria Fisa and other places of Italy having for their guide a Priest cloathed in white and carrying in his hand the Crucifix he pretended so much zeal and religion that he was held a Saint These people increased to such a vast body that Boniface the nineth grew jealous their Priest aimed at the Popedom therefore sent out some armed men against them apprehended their Priest and put him to death upon which the whole multitude fled every man returning to his house These made profession of sorrow weeping for the sins and calamities of those times they eat together in the High-ways and slept all promiscuously together like beasts they are by most reckoned among the Hereticks and not religious orders and so are the Fratricells or Beghardi who would be counted the third order of Franciscans they were called Fratricella Brothers of the Cells and Caves where they dwelt Their Women were named Beghinae and Beguttae These sprung up Anno 1298. they went with their faces covered and their heads hanging down their lives were ●●agirious and their opinions heretical as we have already shewed among the Heresies therefore they are condemned by Boniface the eight Clemens the fifth and Iohn the twenty second yet Gregory the eleventh and Eugenius the forth defended such of them against whose life and faith no just exceptions could be taken Gregory about the year 1378. Eugenius Anno 1431. The Turlupini also though they would have been thought a religious order were heretical in their Teners and therefore condemned and burned Anno 1372. Montolivetenses or Monks of Mount Olivet began Anno 1407. when the Church was divided between three Popes In this distracted time many of Sene betook themselves to the next Hill which they called Mount Olivet and cloathed themselves in white professing St. Bennets rule They were confirmed by Pope Gregory the twelfth There were others of the same name loug before these but Boniface the eighth Anno 1300. put them down and executed their Author at Viterbium he only wore a linnen cloth about his wast the rest of his body naked Q. 23. What were the Canons of Saint George the Mendicants of Saint Hierom the Canons of Lateran Order of the Holy Ghost of Saint Ambrese ad Nemus and of the Minims of Jesu Maria A. The Canons Regular of Saint George called also Apostolici were instituted by Laurence Iustinian Patriarch of Venice Anno 1407. they were confirmed by Gregory the twelfth They wear a linnen surplesse over their garments and a black hood but out
end to all Iewish rites which w●re but shadows of christs sufferings the substance being come the shadows were to vanish therefore the Apostle saith Gal. 4. 9. That they who turns to these beggarly elements again desire to be in bondage again and in the next chapter he tells the Galathians that if they be circumcised Christ shall profit them nothing Lastly this millenary kingdome of eating drinking and sensuall pleasures was fitly devised by Cerinthus the heretick as best suiting with his swinish disposition for he was noted for a person given to gormandizing and libidinous sports Q. 10. What other Sects and Opinions are there now stirring amongst us A. We have Anti-trinitarians or Polonian Arrians which sprung up in Poland Anno 1593. These deny the Trinity of Persons the Divinity of Christ and of the Holy Ghost that Christ was the Son of God essentially but in respect of his dominion and say that the eternal generation of the Son is against truth and reason We have also Millenaries the spawn of Cerinthus the Heretick these dream of a temporary Kingdome bere on Earth which they shall enjoy with Christ a thousand years But indeed they aim at the enjoyment of the temporal estates of such as they call wicked who as they think have no property in their estates We have Traskits so called of one Trask who would have no Christian Sabbath kept but the Jewish Laws observed and their Sabbath or Seventh day to be perpetually kept holy till the worlds end Others we have who will keep no Sabbath at all these we call Anti Sabbatarians We have likewise Anti-Scripturians who reject all Scriptures as mans inventions there are amongst us Divorcers who hold that men may put away their Wives upon small occasions VVe have also Soul-Sleepers who with the Arabick Hereticks hold that the soul dieth or sleepeth with the body whose souls I think are asleep before the body dieth Amongst other professions we have of late Seekers or Expe●●ers who deny there is any true Church or Ministery and therefore they are seeking one But they know not where to find this Church except it be in the Land of Utopia There was one Hetherington a Box maker who rejecting all Church discipline published that the Sabbath of the Iews was abolished by Christ and that every day now is a Sabbath that the books of Esdras were canonicall Scripture and in other opinions agreed with the ●amilists Q. 11. What Opinions in Religion are held by Theaurau John Ans. He cals himself Priest of the Iews sent as he saith from God to convert them his wilde whimsies are these 1. He cals it nonsence and a lie to say that God is Father of us all 2. That we Gospellers as he cals us worship the Devill because saith he the spirit of man is a Devill 3. That it is a Monster and absolute blasphemie to say the godhead dwelt in Christ bodily 4. He wonders how he that created all could be born of a woman by which we may plainly see he is a circumcised Iew. 5. He saith that the child which the Virgin brought forth is love as if the generation of christ were altogether mysticall and not reall 6. He saith That Mary is christ and christ is Mary and that these are but names of one thing 7. He denyeth That Christ was properly born or that he was born in one or that he was begotten or that be could be flesh properly or that he did descend into our fl●sh but into our spirits onely or that he could be included in the Virgins Wombe and withall he belyeth us in saying That we have brought the humanity to be very God whereas we say the same person is God and man one not by conversion of the Godhead into flesh but by taking of the manhood into God One altogether not by confusion of substance but by unity of person 8. He calls the English clergy thieves robbers deceivers sounding from Antichrist and not from the true christ in which we see the Impudent spirit of an heretick who can no other wayes defend his lies and blasphemies but by railing 9. He prateth That the Gospel cannot be preached by another but by it self so that mans voyce or outward sound is a lye and Antichist 10. That our Ministers are not christs ambassadors but that their call is a lye for 't is learning and learning is that wh●re which hath deceived the Nations and compleated the work of Antichrist See the impudence and boldnesse of this blind ignoramus 11. He denyeth that the Priests tips can preserve knowledge though the Scripture is plain for it but by the Priest he understands knowledge it self and so he will make the Holy Ghost to speak Tautologies in saying knowledge shall preserve knowledge here we see the fruits of ignorance 12. He makes the spirit of man to be a quintessence abstracted out of the elementarie motions such is his dull philosophie 13. Out of his kind respect to the Devil by whose instinct he writeth he affirms That he with the false prophet shall receive mercy at last because God with not punish a finite thing infinitely but here be again bewrayes his ignorance for the devil is infinite a posteriore both in regard of his essence and of his desire in sinning besides that God whom he offendeth is infinite 14. H● ignorantly saith That ●e who conf●rs Gods gift is as great yea greater than God himself is so then it must follow that the Apostles were greater than God when they gave the gifts of the Holy Ghost by imposition of hands 15. He impiously saith that Saint Paul wrote many things which he understood not 16. And as impiously doth he say that in them books which we call Scripture is the lye as well as in other books 17. After his ignorant manner he c●●founds the gift of prophesie with the Prophet himself in saying man is not the Prophet but the light in man from God 18. He will not have us to seek for Antichrist abroad for man in darknesse is Antichrist I deny not but every man in darknesse is in some sort an Antichrist yet there is one great Antichrist to be sought for abroad 19. The Trinity which he acknowledgeth is God the Sonne and Man this Trinity is hatched in his crasie 〈…〉 20. He is so mad that he saith he can make one word bear forty significations so he can make 〈◊〉 thou stand for dark or light or hell or heaven or sea or land or angel or Sunne or the devil 21. He will not have Christs body that suffered to be our Saviour nor Christs body for christs body saith he is obedience thus he would fain make christ our Saviour a 〈◊〉 allegorie and therefore in plain termes affirmeth that true Christ hath not nor cannot have any true corporall body for he is a spirit and a spirit is free from fl●sh as if forsooth a spirit flesh could not be united in the same person
then he concludes that the body or flesh which suffered at Ierusalem was not christ body 22. He makes the soul of man to be all one with the Gospel and the body of Christ to be the whole Creation by this and such like stuffe with which his books are fraughted we may see that he deserveth to have his brains purged with Hellebor rather than his crasie opinions refused by arguments or Scripture In the mean while we may perceive to our great grief the lamentable fruits which are begot of two much liberty in religion These impious Opinions are in his printed Pamphlets lately published One Richard Coppi● holdeth some of the before recited opinions withall lately before a confused multitude in an usurped pulpit asserted the lawfulnes of womens preaching for such Ranters a pillory were more fit than a pulpit Q. 12. What opinions in Religion are lately broached by Iohn Reeve and Lodowick Muggleton An. These two would perswade us that they are the two last witnesses and prophets of Christ sent by his spirit to seal the foreheads of the elect and reprobate that one Iohn Robins is the last great Antichrist and son of perdition spoken of by the Apostle in the Thessalonians because he sheweth lying signes and wonders and assumes to himself the titles of the onely God in that he calls himself Adam and Melchisedeth and Father of Iesus Christ in saying the three persons in Trinity are Adam that is himself Abel that is his sonne Iesus and Cai● that is the holy Ghost Many such blasphemies they ascribe to him They affirm also that Christians using the sword of steel are ignorant of Iesus and enemies to his Gospel and they teach that the two uncreated substances of earth and water were eternally resident in the presence of God the Creator that death was from Eternity that the person of the reprobate Angel or Serpent entred into the womb of Eve and there died but quickened in her all manner of uncleannesse that there is no devil at all without the body of man or woman but what dwells within them so that the devil spoken of so often in the Scripture is mans spirit of unclean reason and cursed imagination that God the Father was a spirituall man from Eternity and that in time his spirituall body brought forth a naturall body that if the very Godhead had not died that is say they the soul of Christ which is the eternall Father had not died all men had perished eternally that Moses and Eliah are angels and did represent the person of the Father in heaven as they did the person of the Son on earth that Eliah was made protectour of God when God became a child and that he filled the Lord Iesus with those great revelations of his former glory which he possessed in heaven when he was the immortall Father and that it was Eliah who spake these words from heaven saying this is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased they say also that all the Ministry in this world whether Propheticall or Ministeriall with all the worship taught by them is all a lye and abomination to the Lord. Again they declare that whereas there are three witnesses on earth water blood and the spirit that by water is meant the Commission given to Moses and the Prophets under the Law by blood the Commission given to the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospel by the Spirit is meant the Commission of the two witnesses that were to come in this last age whose ministry is invisible and spirituall cutting off all formall worshipping of an invisible spirituall personall God they say there is hardly a minister in the world that confesseth an invisible God but they preach a God of three persons that is a monster instead of one true personall God they say that the true God is a distinct body or person as a man is a distinct body or person again they say that there is no Christian Magistrate in the world that hath any authority from Christ to set up any visible form of worship and that the spirits and bodies of men are both mortall both begot together and both of one nature that the spirit is nothing without the body that it is the Spirit alone that walks and works eats and drinks and dies for the spirit is a naturall fire of reason they say also that the bodies or persons of holy men wherein they lived and died shall not appear again any more but when the Saints are glorified they are absolutely of the very same glorious nature both in spirit and body as God is and that believing spirits are of the very same divine nature of God This is the summe of their Divinity and Phylosophie as may be seen in their transcendent spirituall Treatise as they call it which is full of transcendent nonsence and blasphemie● for here they lay their axe to the very root of Christianity in giving a new Father to our Saviour Jesus Christ in calling the blessed Trinity a monster in denying the Creation whilst they make earth and water eternall in making angels and mens souls mortall in making weak man Gods protector and author of that divine knowledge which was in Christ in denying the Ministry of the Gospel and the power of the Magistrates and the outward worship of God and making the souls of men corporeall in denying also the Resurrection of the flesh and transforming men into the Divine nature By this and other wicked tenets permitted and countenanced among us at this time we see what Christian religion is come to in this land so famous heretofore for piety and zeal we received Christianity as soon as any Nation in Europe whether by the preaching of Saint Peter or Saint Paul or Simon Zel●tes or Ioseph of Arimathea I know not but all agree we received it very early and have continued ever since in the profession thereof neither was there ever any Nation more devout and zealous in the advancement thereof as our goodly Temples Monasteries Hospitals Colledges and Schools can witnesse but alas now Quantum mutamur ab illis Angligenis what is there left among us but the bare Skeliton of Religion the vitall substance thereof being eat up and consumed by heresies and blasphemies worse than any Sarcophagus I may here with Ieremiah complain that from the daughter of Sion all her beauty is departed her Princes are become like Harts c. How is the gold become so dimme and the most fine gold changed and the stones of the Sanctuary are scattered in every corner of the streets c. Q. 13. What are the opinions of the Quakers An. These fanaticall spirits are called Quakers because they use to quake and tremble when they prophesie so did the Heathen soothsayers of old non vultus non color unus non compta mansere 〈◊〉 sed pectus anhelum rabie fera corda tument c. but the spirit of God is the spirit of peace
5. They hold Baptisme a pure legal administration not proceeding from Christ but from Iohn 6. They jest the Scriptures that divine Legacy of our salvation out of all life reverence and authority quoting it in driblets and shreds to make it the more ridiculous In their Letters they endeavour to be strangely prophane and blasphemous uttering Athiesticall curses and imp●ecations which is a kind of canting among them as among Cypsies as for exampe in one you have this stile My own heart blood from whom I daily receive life and being to whom is ascribed all honour c. thou art my garment of needle work my garment of salvation Eternal plagues consume you all rot sink damne your bodies and souls into devouring fire where none but those who walk uprightly can enter The Lord grant that we may know the worth of Hell that we may scorn heaven 7. Sinne is onely what a man imagines and conceives to be so within himself 8. Ordinances they account poore low things nay the perfections of the Scriptures is so inconsiderable in their apprehensions that they pr●●ead to l●ve above them their lives witnesse they live without them 9. If you ask them what christian Liberty is they will tell you that it consists in a community of all things and among the rest of women which they paint over with an expression call'd The enjoyment of the fellow creature 10. The enjoyment of the Fellow-creature cannot but be seconded with lascivious songs drinking of healths musick dancing and bawdry Lastly They are with the Anabaptists those that most of all kick against the pricks of Authority for Magistracy cannot have in it any thing more sacred than the Ministry so that they wish as much policy in the State as government in the Church which is none at all so to bring an Eygyptian darknes upon both that the world might be the less scandalised at their madness●s extravagancies But this age which is much more fruitfull of Religions than of good works of Scripture-phrases than of Scripture practises of opinions than of piety hath spawned more religions than that Lady of Holland did In●ant to mention all which were to weary both my self and the reader therefore I will content my self to mention some few more as the Independents Presbyterians c. Q. 17. What are the opinions of the Independents A. 1. These are so called because they will have every particular Congregation to be ruled by their own laws without dependence upon any other in Church matters 2. They prefer their own gathered Churches as they call them in private places to the publick congregations in Churches which they flight calling them steeple-houses 3. They hold there is no use of learning or degrees in Schools for preaching of the Gospel and withall that maintenance of the Ministry by Tithes is Superstitious and Judaicall 4. They are against set forms of prayer chiefly the Lords prayer accounting such forms a choaking of the spirit 5. They give power to private men who are neither Magistrates nor Ministers to erect and gather Churches and to these also they give the power of election and ordination if we may call this ordination of deposition also and excommunication even of their own officers and finall determination of all Church causes 6. They commit the power of the Keyes in some places to women and publickly to debate and determine Ecclesiastick causes 7. They admit private men to administer the Sacraments and Magistrates to perform the Ministers office in marrying 8. They permit divorces in slight cases 9. They hold Independency to be the beginning of Christs Kingdome which is to be here on earth a thousand years 10. They place much Religion in names for they do not like the old names of Churches of the dayes of the week of the moneths of the year of Christmasse Michaelmasse Candlemasse c 11. In preaching they will not be tyed to a Text nor to prayer but they make one to preach another to pray a third to prophesie a fourth to direct the Psalm and another to blesse the people 12. They permit all gifted men as they call them to preach and pray and then after prophesying is ended they question the preacher in the points of his Doctrine 13. some of them allow no Psalms at all to be ●●ng in publick calamities and will not suffer Wo●●en to sing Psalms at all 14 They will baptise no children but those of their own Congregations whom they esteem not members of their Church untill they have taken their Covenant 15. They in divers places communicate every Sunday among themselves but will not communicate with any of the reformed Churches 16. Whilest they are communicating there is neither reading exhortation nor singing not have they any preparation nor catechising before the communion and either they sit at Table or have no Table at all and because they would not seem to be superstitious in the time of administration they are covered 17. They allow their Ministers to sit in civil Courts and to voice in the choosing of Magistrates 18. They are against violent courses in matters of Religion nor will they have the conscience to be forced with fear or punishment but gently to be inclined by perswasion and force of argument in which point I commend their Christian moderation for in propagating the Gospel neither Christ nor his Apostles nor the Church for many hundred years did use any other sword but the word to bring men to Christ. Q. 18. What Tenets are held by the Independents of New England An. Besides those opinions which they hold with other Independent they teach that the spirit of God dwells personally in all the Godly 2. That their Revelations are equall in Authority with the Scriptures 3. That no man ought to be troubled in his Conscience for sinne being he is under the Covenant of grace 4. That the Law is no rule of our conversation 5. That no Christian should be prest to practise holy duties 6. That the Soul dieth with the body 7. That all the Saints upon earth have two bodies 8. That Christ is not united to our fleshly body but to the new body after the manner that his Humanity is united to his Divinity 9. That Christs Humanity is not in heaven 10. That he hath no other body but his Church 11. They reckon all Reformed Churches except themselves profane and unclean All these opinions savour of nothing but of pride carnall security blasphemy and slighting of Gods written word which is able to make the man of God perfect and wise unto salvation Q. 19. Vpon what grounds do the Independents forsake our churches An. Because they do not see the signes of grace in every one of our members but this ground is childdish for many are in the state of grace in whom we see no outward signes so was Saul when he persecuted the Church he was then a vessel of mercy and many in whom we
when a sinner of a wicked man is made good which is by remission of sins and infusion of inherent righteousnesse The second justification is when a just man becomes more just and this is in doing of good works by the merit of which he can make himself more just They say Christ is the meritorious cause of our justification but the formal cause is either intrinsecal and that is the habit of infused grace or extrinsecal to wit the righteousnesse of Christ or actual which are our good workes so that here is a threefold formal cause they teach that justification consisteth not in the bare remission of sins but also in the inward renovation of the mind That we are not onely justified but also saved by good works as efficient causes 5. Concerning good works they teach that the good works of just men are absolutely just and in a manner perfect that a just man may fulfil the Law that a man is justified by works not in the first but second justification yet not without the assistance of grace 〈…〉 unregenerate man by the works of repentance may merit the grace of justification ex congruo as doing works agreeing to the law of God that they who are justified by the first justification do merit life eternal by their works ex condigno Q. 4. What are their Tenets concerning pennance fasting prayer and almes A. They teach that faith is no part of pennance That repentance may be totally lost That the parts thereof are not mortification and vivification but confession contrition and satisfaction That pennance is a Sacrament that contrition is to be ascribed partly to grace partly to free-will That it is necessary to justification and the cause of remission of sins and that by it all sins are pardonable That a●ricular confession to the Priest is necessary to reconcile us to God That a sinner before baptism is received into grace without his own satisfaction onely by the satisfaction of Christ but after baptisme he must make satisfaction himself That after the fault is forgiven there remaines often times the guilt of temporary punishment either here or in purgatory which must make satisfaction that the punishments of purgatory may be redeemed by fasting prayers almes c. 2. Concerning fasting They hold it a sin and deserving death to eat of meats prohibited by the Church That fasting consisteth onely in abstinence from meat not from drink That the times of fasting chiefly Lent are of Apostolical institution That fasti●g is satisfactory and meritorious That the tradition of the Church in such indifferent things obligeth the conscience 3. Concerning prayer They say that it is meritorious that the Canonical hours of prayer should be observed that they are to be said or sung in Latine by the Clergy and Monks That the titles given to the Virgin Mary are true and holy That to prayer in the Quite ought to be joyned singing Organs Trumpets and other musical instruments 4. Concerning almes They hold that the giving thereof is meritorious That there is not onely a corporal but also spiritual almes consisting in comforting counselling teaching c. That almes may be raised of ill gotten goods and filthy lucre as of Whore-houses c. Q. 5. What opinions do they hold concerning the Sacraments A. They teach that the efficacy of the Sacraments depends upon the intention of the giver That the Sacraments are not seals to confirm the promises of grace That grace is contained in and conferred by the Sacraments ex opere operato and that the receivers thereof by their justifying vertue are saved That three Sacraments namely Baptisme Confirmation and Order do imprint an indelible character form or figure in the very substance of the soul the caracter of Baptisme is Passive making a man capable of all other Sacraments that of Order is Active that of Confirmation is partly Active partly Passive That there are seven Sacraments of the New Testament That all the Ceremonies used by them in the Sacraments are necessary 2. Concerning Baptisme They say that Lay-men and Women in case of necessity may Baptise That the Baptisme of Iohn was not the same with that of Christ nor had the same efficacy and that after Iohns Baptisme it was necessary to receive Christs Baptisme That to Water in Baptisme should be added Oyle Spittle Salt c. The signe of the Crosse Exorcisme Exsufflation a White Garment c. That Baptized Infants have if not Actual yet Habitual Faith infused into them That Infants cannot be saved without Baptisme that Baptisme began to be absolutly necessary on the day of Pentecost That it totally abolisheth original sin 3. Concerning the Eucharist They say that onely unleavened bread is to be used That Christ by way of Concomitance is wh●lly in the Bread that is his Body Blood Soul Divinity c. That the whole Essence of the Sacrament is in the Bread alone That there is no necessity to communicate under both kinds That the Wine ought necessarily to be mixed with Water That the Priest may participate alone That the Eucharist is profitable for the dead That the Bread should be dipt into the Wine that it should be elevated carried in Procession adored c. That there is no trope in these words This is my body c. That Christs Body is not onely really but substantially in the Sacrament That it may be at one time in many places That the Bread is transubstantiated into Christs body That the form of consecration consisteth in these words This is my body That the Mas●e is a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the quick and the dead 4. Concerning Confirmation Pennance Extream Vnction Orders and Matrimony They teach that these are Sacraments properly so called that there is vertue in Extream Vnction either to cure the body or to do away the remainders of sin for this cause they anoint 6. parts of the body to wit the Eyes Ears Mouth Hands Reins and Feet That Ordination is a Sacrament as well in Deacons Sub-Deacons Acoluthi Exorcists Readers and Door-Keepers as in Priests Q. 6. What Ceremonies do they use in the five controverted Sacraments A. In confirmation the Bishop anointeth the childs forehead with chrisme making the signe of the Crosse thereon and saying I signe thee with the signe of the Crosse and confirme thee with the chrisme of salvation in the Name of the Father c. Then he strikes him on the cheeke to shew he must not refuse to suffer for Christ. In Pennance the Bishop goeth to the Church door where the Penitents lie prostrate on the ground saying Children come to me and I will teach you the feare of the Lord. Then he kneeleth and prayeth for them and having used some words of admonition he brings them into the Church this is done on the day of the Lords Supper that they might be partakers thereof all the Church doors are then opened to shew that all people have accesse to Christ.
which the Eucharist is covered signifying how Christs body was wrapped up in fine linnen for as linnen is first washed then wrung and lastly dried so must our souls be first washed in tears then wrung by repentance and lastly dried by the heat of the love of God Organs are also used in Churches to excite the minde and to stir up devotion Yet in the Popes Chappel there are none perhaps to shew that he needs no such helps Their Altars are inclosed with railes to keep off the people for the Priests only have accesse to them they were anciently places of refuge and are covered all the year except in the passion week then they are stript to represent Christs nakednesse on the crosse Ordinarily the Altar is placed towards the East yet in the Church of Antioch it was placed towards the West On the Altar s●ands the Pixis or Ciborium which keepeth the Host for strangers sick persons and travellers but it must not be kept above seven dayes least it mould therefore the Priest must eat it himselfe and put in a fresh one They have Fonts called Baptisteria of stone in which the water of Baptisme is consecrated by the Priest who poureth oyle into it he also by breathing and by certain words exorciseth the evil spirit Salt is consecrated and put into the childs month to shew that he must have spiritual Salt within him Then the Priest layeth his hand on the childs head in sign he is reconciled and made a member of the Church Then he signeth his forehead with the sign of the crosse that hereafter he may not be ashamed of Christ crucified He puts his finger into his eare and into his nostrils also with spittle saying to his right eare Epph●ra that is be thou opened to shew that by nature we are deaf in spiritual things as was that man whom Christ after this manner cured in the Gospel The touching of the Nostrils sheweth that the child must remember his vow in baptisme so long as he hath breath in him Then he anoints the Child two times that he may renounce the devil and all his works c. The breast is first anointed then the shoulders to shew the strength of our love and faith in the Trinity and that withall we must be wrestlers against all spiritual wickednesse The childe is three times dipe in the water and in some places onely sprinkled to shew Christs three days burial and our faith in the Trinity After baptisme the child is anointed by the Priest on the forehead with chrisme and cloathed in white to signifie he must cast off the old man and be cloathed with innocency Antiently those that were baptized at Easter wore white all that week which they laid aside the Sunday following called therefore 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 this also signified the glory of the resurrection Then a wax candle burning is given him to shew the light of faith and knowledge that should be in him and with which he should be ready to meet the bridegroom Then the Godfathers are instructed concerning their duty to the Child Q. 28. What other Vtensils have they in their Churches A. They have three viols or flaggons for oyl which the Priest carrieth on the day of the Lords Supper one holds the oyl of the Catechumeni the second is for the Chris●me and the third for the oyl of the sick With the Chrisme the baptized are anointed on their crown and they that are confirmed on the forehead and so are they who be ordained The Catechumeni and 〈◊〉 are anointed with single oyl They have also in thei● Churches holy water pots which by some are called 〈◊〉 by others Situlae and Aqu●nina●ia and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This pot must be of Stone or Marble at which is tied with a chaine the holy water spunge with this salt water they are 〈◊〉 that enter into the Church because antiently they wasted before they entered into the Temple to shew that with pure and sancti●ied minds we must come before God They have also Bells which they 〈◊〉 with water and consecrate with certain prayers these have suceeded the Trumpets used by the Jewes to 〈◊〉 together the Assembly They have also Altars which they anoint and consecrate holy Reliques whereof many doubtlesse are supposititious and false therefore no new Reliques are to be received without the Bishops approbation nor to be honoured without the Popes authority And because the Altar represents Christ therefore the Priest after Masse in sign of reverence and subjection kisseth the Altar by which also he sheweth the great desire the Church hath to enjoy Christ when she saith Let him kisse me with the kisses of his mouth The Vestry is the place where the sacred Vestiments of which we have already spoken are kept Here the Priest before Masse puts on his holy garments this place they say represents the Virgins Womb in which our great high Priest put on the garment of our humane nature that in it he might offer the true propiatory sacrifi●e to God his Father for the sins of the world They make also every part of their material Temple to have a mystical signification The Quire represents the Church triumphant the main body the Church militant the Porch or great Door is Christ by whom onely we have accesse to the Father the Windows are the Scriptures which give light to the spiritual Church the Pillars are the Apostles by their Doctrine supporting the Church the Pavement is Humility and faith the Cover is Gods protection the Tower with the Bells are the Prelates which ought to be eminent in their conversation and sounding in their preaching the Cock on the top thereof is to put them in minde of their vigilancy the Lights that shine continually in their Churches are to signifie our good works which should shine before men Q. 29. What office do they perform to the dead A. They have a peculiar office or service for the dead in Purgatory which some perform every third day that they might be partakers of Christs resurrection who overcame death that day some again every seventh day that they may attain to the eternal Sabbath or rest in Heaven whereof Gods resting from the works of Creation on the se●enth day was a type Others perform this office the thirtieth day because the Israelites mourned for Moses and Aaron thirty days Others again the fortieth day because Ioseph and his brethren bewailed Iacob forty days Others the fiftieth day because the fiftieth year is the Jubilee or year of liberty which they wish these imprisoned soules may partake eternally Others perform this office yearly and make it anniversary but if this day fall upon Sunday or any other solemn festivity then it must not be kept nor put off till the next day as the feasts of the Saints are but must be kept the day before that the souls may the sooner partake the fruits of our devotion No
will the house stand immovable Though the rain descend and the windes flow and the hloods come and beat upon that house yet it shall n●t fall because it is founded upon a Rock M●t. 7. But if blinde Sampson if people void of understanding trusting to their strength shake once this pillar of Religion down falls the whole Fabrick of Government Law and Discipline Of this examples in all ages may be brought to shew how States and Religion like Hippocrates Twins do live and die together so long as Religion flourished in Iude● so long did that State flourish but when the one failed the other fell Iudah and Israel were not carried away into Captivity till they had Captivated Religion As Sampsons strength consisted in his Hair so doth the strength of a Common●wealth in Religion if this be cut off the Philistions will insult over the strongest State that ever was and bring it to destruction This is the ●alladiu●● which if once removed will expose the strongest City in the world to the enemy The Greek Empire had not fallen from the Pal●●●gi to the Turk had the Christian Religion stood firm in Constantinople The Poet could acknowledge that so long as Rome stood religious so long the continued Victorious Diis de 〈…〉 And Tullie confesseth that the instruments by which the Romans subdued the world were not strength and policy but Religion and Piety Non calliditate r●bore sed pietate ac Religione omnes gentes nationsque super astis Orat. de 〈◊〉 resp For this cause the Senat and people of Rome were careful to send their prime youth to 〈◊〉 the University then of the 〈◊〉 Religion to be instructed in the grounds of all their sacr●d and mysterious learning Therefore 〈◊〉 in Dion Cassius ● 3. adviseth Augustus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by all means and at all times to advance the worship of God and to cause others to do the same and not 〈…〉 innovations in Religion whence proceed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conspiracies sediti●●● and conventicles or combinations Religion is the Bulwark as plato faith of Laws and Authority it is the band of all humane society the fountain of justice and fidelity beat down this Bulwark break this band stop this fountain and bid Adieu to all Laws Authority Unity Justice and Fidelity Q. 2. How doth it appear that Religion is the foundation of Common-we●li●e● human societies A. 1. Because Religion teacheth the fear of God without which men should live more securely among Lyons and Beares then among men therefore Abraham Gen. 20. knew that at Ger●● he should both lose his Wife and his life too because he thought surely the fear of God was not in that 〈◊〉 't is not the fear of temporal punishment or of corporal death that keeps men in awe but of eternal torments and spiritual death therefore when men will not fear th●se that can destroy the body they will stand in awe of him who can cast body and soul into Hell fire Mat. 10. It was this fear that begot Religion in the world Primus in 〈◊〉 Deos fecit timor and it is Religion that cherisheth increaseth and quickneth this fear the end then of Common-wealthes and of all societies is that men may live more comfortably and securely then they can do alone but without Religion there can be no security nor comfort no more then there can be fo● Lambs among Wolves for 〈…〉 2. There can be no durable Common-wealth where the people do not obey the Magistrate but there can be no obedience or submission of Inferiours to their Superiours without Religion which teacheth that Princes and Magistrates are Gods Vice 〈◊〉 here on Earth whom if we do not 〈◊〉 and obey we cannot fear and obey God who commands Rom. 13. That every soul be subject to the higher Powers for there is no power but of God 3. There is in all men naturally a desire of happinesse and immortality which cannot be attained without the knowledge and worship of God whom we can neither know nor worship without Religion which prescribeth the rules and way of worshipping him and likewise sheweth us that there is a God that he is one invisible eternal omnipotent the maker of all things c. 4. The Essence and life of a Common-wealth consisteth in Love Unity and Concord but it is by Religion that these are obtained for there is no band or tie so strict and durable as that of Religion by which all the living stones of the great buildings of Kingdoms and States are cemented and like the planks of N●ahs Ark are pitched and glewed together 5. As each particular man is subject to death and corruption so are whole States Corporations and K●ngdoms but the means to retard and keep off destruction and ruin from them is Religion hence those States continue longest where Religion is most esteemed and advanced whereas on the contrary the contempt of Religion is the fore-runner of destruction this we see that when the whole world was united into one corporation and society for slighting Religion were all overthrown in the General Cataclysme except eight religious persons saved in the Ark. The Poet acknowledgeth that all the miseries which befel Italy proceeded from the neglecting of Religion Dii multa neglecti dede●unt Hesperiae mala luctuosae Horat. 6. As all Common-wealths and States know and are assured that they cannot subsist without the protection of Almighty God who is the Author of all humane societies so likewise they know that God will not owne and protect them who either cannot or will not serve worship and honour him which without Religion is impossible to be done by man for as all Nations know even by the comely order and harmony the strange operations of Nature and the beauty of the world that there is a Divinity which is also plain by the actions of Providence so likewise they know that this Divine power must be honoured and obeyed except they will shew ingratitude in the highest degree to him whence they have their living moving being and all they enjoy but without Religion they can neither know how nor where nor when to worship him 7. Every man knows he hath a spiritual reasonable and heavenly soul which naturally delights in the knowledge and contemplation of heavenly things which shew that he cannot reject all Religion except he will shake off nature and humanity 8. The veriest Atheists in the world who denyed God at least in his providence though they could not in his essence yet affirmed that Religion was necessary in all societies without which they cannot subsist as is already said 9. As subjects will not obey their Princes but fall into rebellions so Princes will not protect their Subjects but become Wolves and Tyrants if it were not for Religion that keeps them in awe and assures them that there is over them a King of Kings and Lord of Lords to whom they must give an account of their actions
Clavigeri Cruciferi 341. Hospitalarii 342 c. See Monks Ordination in the beginning of the world 2. P. PAllas the Sun 523 Pan the Sun 521 Pegu its religion 82 Persecution an enemy to Christistianity 183 Persians their ancient religion 68 c. Persius his notable saying 107 Peru its religion 114 c. Festival dayes 115 c. the Peruvians beliefe of the departed souls 116 Philippinae their religions 89 c. Phoenicians their religion and discipline 67 Poor Pilgrims 323 c. Pilgrims vide Orders Pluto the Sun 526 Polyphemus the Sun 522 Poverty threefold 309 Presbytery the doctrine and tenets thereof 394 c. the office of Presbyters 395. and 398 among the Jewes 412. their power to excommunicate 414 Priapus the Sun 518 Priests and Levites among the Iewes 6. among the Mexicans 108 c. the dignity of Priests and their necessity 535 c. among the Greeks Romans and elsewhere 536 c. Princes should be careful of Religion 503 c they must not dissemble in Religion 509 c. Proserpinae the Sun 526 Protestants 236 c. wherein they agree with and ●●ssent from other christian Churches 496 c. Q. QVakers their opinions 381 c. other opinions of theirs 383 c. wherein the absurdities and impieties of their opinions consist 384. R. RAnters characterized and their opinions 387 c. Iohn Reeve and Lodowick Muggleton their opinions 379 c. Religions of the Northern countries near the pole 73 c. Of the nations by West Virginia and Florida 104 c. of the Northern neighbours of Congo 101 of the African Islands 101. of new Spain 105 c. of the parts adjoyning to Iucatan 111 c. of the Southern Americans 112 c. of Paria Guiana and Debaiba 113. of Asia 1 2 3 4 c. of Africa 94 c. of America 102 c. of Europe 121 of Greeks and Romans ibid c. of Germans Gauls and Britains 148 etc. of Danes Swedes Moscovites and their neighbours 151 c. of the Scythians Getes Thracians Cymbrians Goths etc. 153 c. of the Lithuanians Polonians Hungarians etc. 154 etc. of the Mahumetans 162 etc. of Christians 181 etc. by what engines battered 183. pestered with diversity of opinions 239 c. of the Greeks Religion at this day 478 etc. of Moscovia 481 etc. of Armenia 489. of the Melchites 490. of the Georgians ibid. etc. of the Circassians 491. of the Nestorians ibid. etc. of the Indians and Iacobites 492. of the Maronites ibid. etc. of the Cophti 493. etc. Abyssins 494. etc. Religion the ground of government and greatnesse 500 etc. the foundation of all Commonwealths 501 etc. most re●quisite in Princes and Governours 503 etc. one Religion to be taught publickly 505 etc. different Religions how and when to be tolerated 506 etc. dissimulation in Religion rejected 509 etc false Religions why blessed and the contem●ers punished 5●1 etc. religious policie and ceremonies 512 etc. mixed Religions 514 etc. what Religion most consonant to natural reason 516 etc. Religion how supported 535 etc. Religion which is best 538 etc. Romans their old Religion 122 etc. their chief Festivals 123 etc. their chief gods 125 etc. their Priests 128 etc. Sacrifices 129 etc. their Marriage rites 130 etc. their Funeral rites 131. Roman Church different from others about the Scriptures 429. about Predestination Gods image and sinne ibid. etc. about the law of God Christ Faith Justification and good Works 430 etc. about Penance Fasting Prayer and Almes 432 etc about the Sacraments 433 etc. and their ceremonies in those controverted 434 etc. about the Saints in heaven 435 etc. about the Church 436. etc. about Councils Monks Magistrates and Purgatory 438. etc. the outward worship of the Roman Church and first part of their Masse 439 etc. Roman Acolyths their offices 440 Romanists their manner of dedicating Churches 443 etc. and what observable thereupon 444 etc. their consecration of Altars etc. 446 etc. the degrees of Ecclesiastical persons in the Church of Rome 448 etc. their sacred Orders 449 etc. office of the Bishop 452 etc. and what colours held sacred 453 etc. the other parts of the Masse 454 etc. other parts of their worship 457 etc. their Festival dayes 458 etc. their Canonical houres of prayer and observations thereon 464. etc. their processions and observations thereon 467 their Ornaments and Utensils used in Churches dedicated to Christ and the Saints 472 etc. their office performed to the dead 475 etc. Russians see Moscovites S. SAtans stratagems vide miracles Old Saxons worshipped their gods under divers shapes and formes 149 etc. Scythians their old Religion 69. Sea how worshipped 143. Sects sprung out of Lutheranisme 231 etc. Sects of this age 376 etc. Shakers vide Quakers Siam its Religion 81 etc. Simon Magus and his scholars vide Hereticks Sociable life preferred to the solitary 247 etc. Socinians their tenets 366 etc. Solomons Temple vide Iewes etc. Soule its immortality believed by the idolatrous Pagans 86 etc. its immortality and life after this believed by the Americans 109. by the Brasilians also 113 etc. Spain vide New Spain Sumatra its Religion 90 etc. Sun how worshipped 139 etc. the Gentiles chief and onely God 516 etc. his divers names and worship ibid. etc. superstitious Sun worship 530 etc. how painted and worshipped by the Northern Nations 533 etc. Syrians their gods 65 c. T. IOhn Tany vide Theaurau Iohn Tartars their old Religion 69. c. their diversities of Religions 72. c. Thesurau Iohn his opinions 377. c. Titbonus the Sun 523. Trinity acknowledged by the Americans 109. denied by Simon Magus and his scholars with others besides Iewes and Mahumetans and why 185. etc. Turlupini 319. V. VEnus all one with the Sun 524 etc. Virginia its Religion 103 etc. Vulcan the Sun 523. W. VVIckliffe's opinions 226. etc. Z. ZEeilan its Religion 90. FINIS APOCALYPSIS OR THE REVELATION Of certain notorious Advancers OF HERESIE Wherein their Visions and private Revelations by Dreams are discovered to be most incredible blasphemies and enthusiastical dotages Together with an account of their Lives Actions and Ends. Whereunto are added the effigies of seventeen who excelled the rest in rashness impudence and lying done in Copper Plates Faithfully and impartially translated out of the Latine by I. D. IS London Printed by E. Tyler for Iohn Saywell and are to be sold at his shop at the sign of the Grey-hound in Little-Britain without Aldersgate 1655. TO THE Excellently Learned EDWARD BENLOVVES OF Brenthall in Essex Esquire c. Worthy Sir I Have here presumed to present you with a strange and bloody Tragedy of Hereticks and Enthusiasts written in Latine by a most elegant pen by one who hath concealed his name as I conceive out of this reason that living near the times and places of this representation it might have proved dangerous to him to have published it Here you have Religion brought upon the stage in very strange disguises nay they make her
act parts the most contrary to her nature imbruing her white and innocent hands in blood and Massacres But as she hath met with Wolves to destroy and tear in pieces so hath she also met with Shepheards to heal and protect and among those the most laborious Authour of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ANZEBEIA hath not bin the least considerable His severe and most indefatigable labours in most parts of Learning are consummated in this piece of Religion wherein like an experienced Anatomist he hath left no vein un-cut up To fall into excessive commendations of him were to commit a moral absurdity by praising one whom the general Trumpet of Fame hath blaz'd abroad for so great an advancer of Vertue and Learning But to trouble you with them were yet to be so much the more importunate whose conversation with him was so great that whatsoever I may say of him I shall not acquaint you with so much as your self know Nor did the influence of your Patronage raise and animate only him but there are so many other monuments of your great encouragements to learning that it will be thought modesty in me not to mention all But your excessive Benefactorship to the Library of S. Iohns Colledge at Cambridge whereof I have sometimes had the honour to be an unworthy member I cannot passe over as a thing which will stand upon the file of memory as long as learning shall find professors or children And that which increases the glory of your munificence is that that Library may hoast that it is furnished with the works of its owne sonnes which being the greatest act of retribution and gratitude that may be must be accordingly acknowledged by all that shall come after But that which hath the most engaged and satisfied the English world is that your endeavours have displayed themselves in their clearest light in that one thing that is necessary that is to say Religion not only by being a constant assertor of her purity here in England but in that after more then Ulyssean Travels throughout most parts of Europe you have returned to your former enjoyments of that chast Penelope when others either out of weaknesse or surprise are ensnared and besotted with the Tenets of other Countries whereby they are both ingrateful and injurious to their own by preferring the prudence and policy of another before hers Religion certainly if well improved is the Talent that felicifies the improver if not condemnes him It is that universal Patrimony which entitles us to be the sonnes of God and by which we are adopted into the assured hope of eternal happinesse It is the Loadstone wherewith when our soules are once touched they are directed to the right pole of the eternally beatifical vision and without which we must infallibly expect to split against the rocks and shelves of perdition It is the consummation of heavens indulgence to Mankind that which doth familiarize us and makes good our Interest in the great being and cause of all things It is the perfection of nature since that whatsoever we know of the divinity by her comes only by the assistance and mediation of our sences but the other furnishes us with a more evident assurance and that in things which can be neither seen heard nor conceived by the more particular providence of Grace and Faith whereby he is pleased to bow down the heavens and descend unto a familiar conversation with our very spirits But that which ought further to endear all men to Religion is that she only next to God may pretend Ubiquity as being a thing written in such indelible characters in the hearts of all men that even the most barbarous nations and the greatest strangers to civility and policy have acknowledged some divine worship though their pravity or want of instruction may have blinded them from the true but yet that eclipse of the true God hath not been total insomuch as they have still retained a sense and veneration of Religion so that to the best of their imaginations they have created something like God to themselves To make this yet more evident we are to note that most people though they had not so clear apprehensions of the immortality of the soul as we have yet were they not only perswaded of the impossibility of its annihilation but have also acknowledged rewards and punishments to be expected after this life To ascend yet a little higher the divinity and preheminence of Religion is demonstrated in that it exerciseth that Empire and Soveraignty over the mind of man that no blandishments of the flesh no temptations no torments have been able to dispossesse it It hath triumph'd in the midst of its persecutions and by her sufferings hath conquered her persecutors Her pleasing Ravishments can stifle for a time all sence of humanity elude flames and racks and so arm the delicacy and tendernesse of virgin-purity as to overcome the hardiest Tyrants It is she that raises our soules to a holy boldnesse and intimacy in our addresses to heaven being indeed rapt into the heavens of divine contemplation by her extasies and illuminations It was her inspiring communication that elevated your pious soul when you described the divine perfections of the incomparable THEOPHILA These things can she do and greater when there is but one grain of true Faith but when she is defiled and adulterated with humane ceremonies and inventions she is deformed and looses all her grace and beauty And among these hath she met with two most importunate pretenders Atheisme and Superstition the one strips her stark naked the other meretriciously prostitutes her in the disguises of humane Inventions And that she hath been thus evill entreated in all places and times this book gives but too great testimony whether you look on the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or this small appendix treating for the most of what happened in High and Low Germany I would not draw any excuse for our own gyrations of Religion here from their madnesse but rather condem● them as things that would have out-vy'd the extravagance of the former But to draw any argument against Religion from either were impious for if we did we must in consequence deny all both particular and universal providence of Almighty God we must deny the Scriptures the heavenly Legacy of eternal salvation we must deny Heaven Hell Eternity nay take away the Cement of all humane society and expect to see the order and beauty of the universe hurried into darknesse and confusion since it ought not to out-last man for whom it was created Nay but let us rather professe humanity and make this use of the failings and extravagance of others in matters of Religion To humble our selves to a relyance on that immense Being who hath thought fit to plant Religion in the heart of man to direct him in his voyage to eternal happinesse wherein that every man might take the right way is the earnest prayer of Worthy SIR Your most devoted and
Christians Whether to be permitted amongst Christians to exercise their own Religion Wherein Christians are not to communicate with Iews Iews spend eight days in their Easter s●lemnities Their Pentecost Their feast of Tabernacles Their new Moons Fast in August Their solemnities in beginning the new year Their preparation for morning prayer Their feast of Reconciliation and Ceremonies therein Their Rites after the Law is read over Church Offices sold among the Iews Their feast of Dedication Their feast of Purim Their fasts Their Marriages Their Bills of Divorce Their separation of the wife from the deceased Husbands brother Their circumcision and Rites thereof How they redeem their first born Their duty to the sick Their Ceremonies about the dead Babylonians their ancient Religion The making worshipping of Images and bringing in Idolatry The Gentiles Idols were dead men Hierapolis the Religion thereof Gods of the Syrians Phoe●icians Their Religion and Discipline Arabians thei● Religion and Discipline Persians their ancient Religion Scythians their old Religion Tartars their old Religion Pagans their knowledge of the Creation Tartars their diversities of Religion Religions of the Northern countries neer the Pole Three wayes whereby Satan deludes men by false miracles The fear of Satans stratagems though illusions whence it proceeds Our duty respecting the many stratagems and illusions of Satan Chinois their Religion Indians their Ancient religion Siam its religion Pegu its Religion Bengala and its Religion Magor and its Religion Cambaia and its religion Goa the religion thereof Malabar its religion Pagans though Idolatrous believe the immortality of the soule Narsinga and Bisnagar its Religion Japon its religion Philippinae their religions Sumatra and Zeilan their Religions Egyptians their ancient Religion Egyptian Idolatry continuance thereof Egypt its modern religions Africans their Religion Fez the Religion and Church discipline thereof Their times of prayer Morocco its Religion Guinea its Religion Aethiopians of Africa their ancient Religion Their Religion at this day The lower Aethiopians their Religion Angola its Religion Congo its religion The Religion its Northern Neighbours African Islands their religions America the Religion thereof Virginia its Religion Florida its Religion Religions of the nations by west Virginia and Florida New Spain it● Religion Idolaters their cruelty and cost in their barbarous sacrifices Persius his notable saying Mexico its Priests and Sacrifices Americans acknowledge a Supreme God a Trinity the immortality of souls a life after this and have some tradition of Noahs flood New Spain its festival days Jucatan its religion and parts adjoyning Southern America the Religion thereof Paria Guiana and Debaiba their Religions Brasil its Religion Peru its Religion Peruviant their Festival days Peruvians their Belief of the departed souls Americans their superstitious feare aud Tyranny thereof Hispaniola its Religion Idolatry further condemned Europeans Greekes and Romans their Religions Romans their old Religion See Alexan● ab Alexandro Plutarch Pli● Cicero Gel●● Fenestella L●tus Their chief Festivals See Plutarch Alex. ab Alexandro Ioseph Scaliger Rosinus and others Their chiefgods But one God acknow●edged by the wiser sort of Gentiles Of these see Augustine in the City of God Lactantius Cicero Plutarch Rosinus and others Their Priests Of these see● the aforenamed Authors Romans their Sacrifices Of these particulars see Servius on Virgil Rosinus Alex●● ab Alex. and the Latine Poets Their marriage Rites See Sc●liger de re Poetica Alex. ab Alex. Rosinus Servius Del-Rio in Senecam c. Their Funeral Rites Of these and other customs see Virgil. and Servius on him Kirchmannus also Rosinus Rhodiginus Alex. ab Alex. Gyraldus and others Burial of the dead an act of justice and mercy Aen. l. 9. Aen. lib. 10. Greeks and Gentiles their Religion and gods See the Greek Poets and their Interpreters Of these see the Greek and Latine Poets Greeks their gods how worshipped and painted See Pausanias Capella Boccatins c. See Cartarius Martianus Capella Scaliger Spondanus c. But see the Mytbologists and what we have written in Mystag Poetice Moon how worshipped Earth and fire how worshipped See the Mythologists Sea how worshipped Of all these we have spoken fully in Mystagogo poetico Death how worshipped Of these things see more in Mystag Poetic Greeks their Sacrificing See Suidas Eustathius Rhodiginus Athenaeus c. Their Priests and Temples But of the●● passages 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 on Aristoph●● Suidas 〈◊〉 Virgil Cerda on Tertullian Rhodiginus Turne●us and others Germans Gauls and Brittains their Religions See Tacitus Cesars Commentaries Camden and others Old Saxons worshipped their gods under divers shapes and forms Danes Swedes Moscovites and their neighbours their Religions See Saxo Grammaticus Cranzius on Vandalia Olaus Guaguin and other Historians Scythians Getes Thracians Cymbrians Goths c their Religions See Olaus Magnus Saxo Guaguinus Io●annes Mag●●s Aventinus c. Lithuanians Polonians Hungarians c. Their Religions See Olaus Munster in his Geography and others Gods of the Gentils Of these see Austin Lactantius Tertullian Plutarch Arnobius Eusebius c. How Ranked and Armed Of these see the Poets and their Commentators Their Chariots how drawn In Myst. Poet. In what peculiar places worshipped Greeks their chiefe Festivals Of these see Suidas Athenaeus Rhodiginus Gyraldus Hesychius ●ertullian Austin Plutarch Iu● Pollux the Scholiast of Aristophanes Meursius and others Mahumetans their Religion See Lanicerus and others Their Law Their opinions Mahomet not that great Antichrist spoken of by Saint Paul and Saint John Their Sects See Borrius Lanicerus Knolles Camerarius Iovius c. Mahumetans their religious orders See Menavino Nicholaus Nicholai Septemcastrensis c. See Georgiovitz Septemcastrensis Busbequius and others Their secular Priests See Cuspinian Knolles c. Their devotion See Georgiovitz Knolles Purcha● c. Their Pilgrimage to Mecca See Vertoman Lanicerus and others Their Circumcision See Georgiovitz and others Their Rites about the sick and dead See Menavino Bellonius c. Their Superstition how far spread Mahumetanism of what continuance Christianity its beginning Yeelds to Mahumetanism Religion by what Engines battered Hereticks and Heresies namely Simon Magus Menander Saturninus Basilides See Austin Irenaeus and Epiphanius upon this subject in their Books they wrote against Heresies Trinity denied by Simon Magus and his Scholars with others besides Iewes and Mahumetans and why See Irenaeus Austin Theodoret Tertullian Epiphanius c. Nicholatians Gnosticks See Irenaeus Tertullian Austin Theodoret c. Carpocrates See the authors above named Eusebius also and Clemens Alexandrinus Cerinthus Ebionites Nazarites See Epiphanius Eusebius Austin c. Valentinians Secundians Ptolomeans See Irenaeus Epiphanius Austin with his Commentator Danaeus c. Marcites Colarbasians Heracleonites See Tertullian Itenaeus Epiphanius Austin c. Ophites Cainites Sethites See the above named Auth●●s Archonticks Ascothypta● See Austin Theodoret Isidorus c. Cerdon Marcion See Epiphanius Eusebius Austin Theodoret c. Apelles Tatianus See Irenaeus Tertullian Eusebius Austin Theodoret Epiphanius c. Cataphrygians See Epiphanius Eusebius Austin Theodoret Isidor
looking forward and two backward in his right hand it held a horn which the Priest every yeer sprinkled with Wine in the left hand a Bow this also seems to be Mars The Sclavi adored an Idol standing on a Pillar with a Plough-share in one hand a Lance and Banner in the other his head was beset with Garlands his leggs were Booted and at one of his heels a bell did hang. Some of them did worship an Idol on whose brest was a Target in which was ingraven an Oxe head It had a Pole-Axe in its hand and a little Bird sitting on its head All these may seem to represent Mars The Moscovites and Russians adored an Idol called Perun in the shape of a man holding a burning stone in his hand resembling Thunder a fire of Oken wood was continually maintained burning to the honour of this Idol it was death for the Ministeres if they suffered this fire to go out It seems this was Iupiters Image The Stetinians in Pomerania worshipped a three-headed Idol and used to ask Oracles or advice of a black horse the charge of which was committed to one of the Priests In the countries about Moscovia they worship an idol called Zolota Baba the golden Hag. It is a Statue like an old woman holding an infant in her bosome and neer to her stands another infant To this Idol they offer the richest Sabel skins they have They sacrifice Stags to her with the blood whereof they annoint her face eyes and her other parts The beasts entrails are devoured raw by the Prlests With this idol they use to consult in their doubts and dangers Q. What Religion did the Scythians Getes Thracians Cymbrians Goths Lucitanians other Europeans profess A. The same Gentilisme with the rest adoring Idols of stocks and stones in stead of the true God or rather they worshipped the Devil as appears by their inhumane humane sacrifices The Scythians used to sacrifice every hundreth captive to Mars So did the Thracians thinking there was no other means to pacifie that angry and butcherly god but by murthering of men Of the same opinion were the old Germans who sacrificed men to Mercury The Cymbrians or Cymmerians by their women Priests used to murther and sacrifice men These she-devils girt with brasse girdles and in a white surplice used to cut the throats of the captives to rip up their bowels and by inspection to foretel the event of the war and withal to make drums of their skins The Goths did not think they pleased the Devil sufficiently except first they had tormented the poor captive by hanging him upon a tree and then by tearing him in pieces among brambles and thorns These Goths or Getes believed that the dead went into a pleasant place where their God Tamolxius ruled to him they used still to send a Messenger chosen out among themselves by lot who in a boat of five Oars went to supplicate for such things as they wanted Their manner of sending him was thus They took him hand and foot and flung him upon the points of sharp pikes if he fell down dead they concluded that the god was well pleased with that messenger if otherwise they rejected him as an unworthy messenger therefore they chose another to whom they gave instructions before he died what he should say to their god and so having slain him upon their pikes committed the dead body in the boat to the mercy of the sea The Lithuanians used to burn their chief captives to their gods The Lusitanians ripped open the bowels of their captives in their divinations and presented their right hands being cut off to their gods The Sclavi worshipped an idol called Suantovitus whose Priest the day before he sacrificeth makes clean the Chappel which none must enter but he alone and whilest he is in it he must not draw his breath but hold his head out of the window least with his mortal breath he should pollute the Idol The next day the people watching without the Chappel door view the Idols cup if they find any of the liquor which was put there wasted they conclude the next years scarcity but other wise they hope for plenty and so they fill the cup again and pray to the Idol for victory and plenty then pouring out old wine at the idols feet and offering to him a great cake they spend the rest of the day in gormandising It is held a sin and a dishonour to the idol not to be drunk then Every one payeth a piece of money to the idols maintenance to which also is paid the third part of all b●oties taken in the war To this purpose the idol maintained three hundred horse whom the Priest payed being the Idols treasurer In Lituania Russia and the adjacent places the Rusticks offer a yearly sacrifice of Calves Hogs Sowes Cocks and Hens about the end of October when their fruits are all gathered in to their idol Ziemiennick they beat all these creatures to death then offer them with prayers and thanksgiving which done they fall to eating and drinking flinging first pieces of flesh into every corner of the house Q. What did the Lithuanians Polonians Hungarians Samogetians and their neighbours professe A. Their chief god was the Sun They worshipped also the Fire which they continually maintained by Priests chosen for that purpose They ascribed also Divinity and worship to trees and the taller the tree was the more adoration it had When Christianity began to be preached among the Lithuanians and were exhorted to cut their trees none would venture to touch these gods till the preache●s encouraged them by their example but when they saw the trees cut down they began to lament the losse of their gods and complained to their Prince of the wrong done to them by the Christians whereupon the Preachers were commanded presently to abandon the country and so these dogs returned to their vomit They adored also Serpents which they entertained in their houses and used by their Priests to ask Oracles or advice of the fire concerning their friends when they fell sick if they should recover health again The same Idolatry was used by the Polonians or Sarmatians The Hungarians or Pannonians did not onely worship the Sun Moon and Stars but also every thing they first met with in the morning Most part of Livonia is yet idolatrous worshipping the Planets and observe the heathenish customes in their burials and marriages In Samogethia a country bordering on Prussia Livonia and Lithuania they worshipped for their chief god the Fire which their Priests continually maintained within a Tower on the top of an high hill till Vladislaus King of Poland beat down the Tower and put out the fire and withal caused their Groves to be cut down which they held sacred with the Birds beasts and every thing in them They burn the bodies of their chief friends with their horses furniture and best cloaths and withal set down victuals by
their Graves believing that the departed soules would in the night time eat and drink there The like superstition is used by the Livonians So the Lapponians are at this day for the most part idolatrous they hold that no marriage which is not consecrated by fire and a flint is lawful therfore by striking of the flint with iron they shew that as the hid sparks of fire flie out by that union so children are propagated by the conjunction of male and female Many parts also of Moscovia at this day continue in their Gentilisme Q. What other gods did the Ge●tiles worship beside those above named A. It were tedious to mention all I will only name some of them Aeolus was god of the Winds Portunus god of Harbours Agonius god of Action Angerona goddess of Squinzees Laverna or Furina goddess of Theeves Aucula goddesse of maid servants Carna goddesse of hinges Aristae●s god of hony Diverra goddesse of sweeping Feronia goddesse of Woods Dice goddesse of Law-suites Fidius of Faith Aruncus of diverting hurt from Corn Hebe of youth Meditrina of Medicines Men● of womens monthly flowers Myodes or Miagrus the same with Belzebub the god of Flies Limentinus of thresholds Peitho goddesse of Eloquence Aius of speech Pecunia of mony Thalassius of marriage Vacuna goddesse of leasure or idlenesse Vitula goddesse of youthful wantonnesse Sentinus of sense Tutanus of defence Vallonia of Vallies Vitunus of life Collina of hills Iugatinus of the tops of mountains We cannot meet with any creature action passion or accident of mans life which had not its peculiar deity Q. How did they rank and arme their gods A. Some of them they called Supernal as Saturn Iupiter Apollo Mercurius Mars Vulcan Bacchus Hercules Cybele Venus Minerva Iuno Ceres Diana Themis Some they named infernal as Pluto Charon Cerberus Rhadamanthus Minos Aeicus Proserpina Alecto Tisiphone Megaera Chimera Clotho Lachesis Atropos Some were deities of the Sea as Oceanus Neptune Triton Glaucus Palemon Proteus Nereus Castor Pollux Phorbus Melicerta Amphitrite Thetis Doris Galataea and the other Sea-Nymphs called Nereides The Country gods and of the Woods were Pan Sylvanus Faunus Pales the Satyres c. There were three deities called Graces or Charites to wit Aegle Thalia Exphrosyne Three Fatal Sisters called Parcae to wit Cl●tho Lachests Atropos Three Furies called Eu●●enides to wit Alecto Megaera Tisiphone The chiefest of their gods they did thus arm namely Saturn with the Sithe Iupiter with Thunder Mars with the Sword Apollo and Diana with Bows an arrows Mercury with his Caduceu● or Rod. Neptune with the Trident or three-forked Scepter Bacchus with the Thyrsus or Spear woven about with Vine-leaves Hercules with his Clave or Club. Minerva with her Lance and Aegis or Target having on it Medusa's head Vulcan with his Tongs c. Q With what creatures weretheir Chariots drawn A. Iupiter Sol Mars and Neptune had their Chariots drawn by Horses Saturn by Dragons Thetis Triton Leucothoe by Dolphins Bacchus by Lynces and Tygers Diana by Stags Luna or the Moon by Oxen Oceanus by Whales Venus by Swans Doves and Sparrows Cybele by Lions Iuno by Peacocks Ceres by Serpents Pluto by four black Horses Mercury in stead of a Chariot had wings on his head and heels The mystical meanings of these things we have opened Q. In what peculiar places were some gods peculiarly worshipped A. Though Apollo was worshipped in many places as in the wood Grynaeum in Ionia on Phaselis a hill in Lycia in Tenedos an Isle of the Aegean Sea in Delos and Claros two of the Cyclad Islands on hill Cynthus in Cyr●ha a Town of Phocis at Rhodes on hill Soracte on Parnassus and other places yet he was chiefly worshipped at Delphi a Town of Phocis So Venus was honoured in Cyprus and in Paphos a Town of the same Isle and in the Isle Amathus in the Aegean Sea on hill Eryx and in Sicilie and elsewhere yet her chief worship was at Paphos So Iuno was worshipped at Samos an I●le of the Icarian Sea at Argos and Mycenae Towns of A●haia and in other places yet she was principally honoured at Carthage in Africa Minerva was worshipped in Aracynthus a hill of Ae●olia in Pyreus a hill of Attica and elsewhere yet She was chiefly honoured at Athens Bacchus was worshipped at Nysa a Town of Arabia at Naxos one of the Cyclades but chiefly at Thebis in Boeotia Diana was worshipped at Delos on hill Cynthus at Ephesus and elsewhere Hercules was honoured at Gades at Tybur a Town near Rome at Tyrintha near Argi at Thebis in Boeotia c. Iupiters worship was maintained at Rome in Lybia on hill Ida in Crete and elsewhere Mars was adoted at Thermodon in Scythia on Rho●●pe a hill in Thracia among the Getes and other Nations Vulcan was chiefly honoured at Lemnos Quitinus at Rome Faunus in Latium Isis in Egypt Aesculapius in Epidaurus a Town in Peloponnesus Cybele in Phrygia chiefly on the hills Ida Berecynthus and Dindymus Fortune was honoured in A●tium and Prae●este Towns of Italy c. Who would know more of these let them consult wi● the Poets Q. What were the Greek chief festivals A. The Greek were these Anacalypteria kept by the Rusticks to Ceres and Bacchus upon the taking in of their fruits but I finde that the feast of Pr●serp●na's wedding with Pluto called Theogamia was called Anacalypteria and so was the third day of each marriage from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to disclose or discover because then the Bride who before had been shut up in her fathers house came abroad to her Husbands house and so the Presents that were given her by her husband that day were called Anacalypteria 2. Anthesteria were Feasts kept to Bacchus so called from Anthesterion the moneth of February in which they were kept But some will have this to be the moneth of November others of August which is most likely because then grapes are ripe and the Athenian children were crowned with Garlands of flowers This feast also was called Dionysia 3. Aletis was a feast at Athens kept to Icarus and Erigone 4. Anthesphoria kept to the honour of Proserpina who was carried away by Pluto as she was gathering of flowers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a flower It was called also Theogamia a divine marriage 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was an Athenian feast kept four days Erasmus mentions only three 6. Ascolia were Attick feasts kept to Bacchus from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bladder because in the middle of the Theatre they used then to dance upon bladders that were blown and oyled onely with one foot that by falling they might excite laughter this dancing was called Ascoliasmus of which Virgil speaks Mollibus in pratis unctos saliere per utres 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were Athenian feasts in the month of September called by them Boedromion this feast was kept with voci●eration and running 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were